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Dive into the research topics where Anke Bossen is active.

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Featured researches published by Anke Bossen.


IEEE Photonics Technology Letters | 2010

Internal Fingerprint Identification With Optical Coherence Tomography

Anke Bossen; Roland Lehmann; Christoph Meier

Existing biometric fingerprint devices show numerous reliability problems such as wet or fake fingers. In this letter, a secured method using the internal structures of the finger (papillary layer) for fingerprint identification is presented. With a frequency-domain optical coherence tomography (FD-OCT) system, a 3-D image of a finger is acquired and the information of the internal fingerprint extracted. The right index fingers of 51 individuals were recorded three times. Using a commercial fingerprint identification program, 95% of internal fingerprint images were successfully recognized. These results demonstrate that OCT imaging of internal fingerprints can be used for accurate and reliable fingerprint recognition.


Journal of Biomedical Optics | 2011

Application of the specular and diffuse reflection analysis for in vitro diagnostics of dental erosion: correlation with enamel softening, roughness, and calcium release

Ekaterina Rakhmatullina; Anke Bossen; Christoph Höschele; Xiaojie Wang; Barbara Beyeler; Christoph Meier; Adrian Lussi

We present assembly and application of an optical reflectometer for the analysis of dental erosion. The erosive procedure involved acid-induced softening and initial substance loss phases, which are considered to be difficult for visual diagnosis in a clinic. Change of the specular reflection signal showed the highest sensitivity for the detection of the early softening phase of erosion among tested methods. The exponential decrease of the specular reflection intensity with erosive duration was compared to the increase of enamel roughness. Surface roughness was measured by optical analysis, and the observed tendency was correlated with scanning electron microscopy images of eroded enamel. A high correlation between specular reflection intensity and measurement of enamel softening (r(2) ≥ -0.86) as well as calcium release (r(2) ≥ -0.86) was found during erosion progression. Measurement of diffuse reflection revealed higher tooth-to-tooth deviation in contrast to the analysis of specular reflection intensity and lower correlation with other applied methods (r(2) = 0.42-0.48). The proposed optical method allows simple and fast surface analysis and could be used for further optimization and construction of the first noncontact and cost-effective diagnostic tool for early erosion assessment in vivo.


Journal of Biomedical Optics | 2012

Effects of enamel abrasion, salivary pellicle, and measurement angle on the optical assessment of dental erosion.

Adrian Lussi; Anke Bossen; Christoph Höschele; Barbara Beyeler; Brigitte Megert; Christoph Meier; Ekaterina Rakhmatullina

Abstract. The present study assessed the effects of abrasion, salivary proteins, and measurement angle on the quantification of early dental erosion by the analysis of reflection intensities from enamel. Enamel from 184 caries-free human molars was used for in vitro erosion in citric acid (pH 3.6). Abrasion of the eroded enamel resulted in a 6% to 14% increase in the specular reflection intensity compared to only eroded enamel, and the reflection increase depended on the erosion degree. Nevertheless, monitoring of early erosion by reflection analysis was possible even in the abraded eroded teeth. The presence of the salivary pellicle induced up to 22% higher reflection intensities due to the smoothing of the eroded enamel by the adhered proteins. However, this measurement artifact could be significantly minimized (p<0.05) by removing the pellicle layer with 3% NaOCl solution. Change of the measurement angles from 45 to 60 deg did not improve the sensitivity of the analysis at late erosion stages. The applicability of the method for monitoring the remineralization of eroded enamel remained unclear in a demineralization/remineralization cycling model of early dental erosion in vitro.


Journal of Biomedical Optics | 2013

Optical pen-size reflectometer for monitoring of early dental erosion in native and polished enamels

Ekaterina Rakhmatullina; Anke Bossen; Kai K. Bachofner; Christoph Meier; Adrian Lussi

Abstract. Application of the specular reflection intensity was previously reported for the quantification of early dental erosion. Further development of the technique and assembly of the miniaturized pen-size instrument are described. The optical system was adjusted to fit into a handy device which could potentially access different positions in the oral cavity. The assembled instrument could successfully detect early erosion progression in both polished (n=70) and native (n=20) human enamels. Different severities of enamel erosion were induced by varying incubation time of polished enamel in 1% citric acid (pH=3.60, 0.5 to 10 min), while the native incisors were treated in the commercial orange juice (Tropicana Pure Premium®, pH=3.85, 10 to 60 min). The instrument provided a good differentiation between various severities of the erosion in vitro. The size of the measurement spot affected the erosion monitoring in native enamel (human incisors). The erosion measurement in the 0.7-mm (diameter) cervical spots showed systematically lower reflection intensities compared with the analysis of central and incisal small spots. The application of larger spot areas (2.3 mm) for the erosion monitoring revealed no effect (p>0.05) of the spot position on the reflection signal. High variation of the teeth susceptibility toward in vitro erosion was detected in native enamel.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2014

Fiber optically integrated cost-effective spectrometer for optical coherence tomography

Stefan Remund; Anke Bossen; Xianfeng F. Chen; Ling Wang; Lin Zhang; Boris Považay; Christoph Meier

A tilted fiber Bragg grating (TFBG) was integrated as the dispersive element in a high performance biomedical imaging system. The spectrum emitted by the 23 mm long active region of the fiber is projected through custom designed optics consisting of a cylindrical lens for vertical beam collimation and successively by an achromatic doublet onto a linear detector array. High resolution tomograms of biomedical samples were successfully acquired by the frequency domain OCT-system. Tomograms of ophthalmic and dermal samples obtained by the frequency domain OCT-system were obtained achieving 2.84 μm axial and 10.2 μm lateral resolution. The miniaturization reduces costs and has the potential to further extend the field of application for OCT-systems in biology, medicine and technology.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2014

Cost-effective optical coherence tomography spectrometer based on a tilted fiber Bragg grating

Stefan Remund; Anke Bossen; Xianfeng F. Chen; Ling Wang; Adedotun Adebayo; Lin Zhang; Boris Považay; Christoph Meier

A compact, fiber-based spectrometer for biomedical application utilizing a tilted fiber Bragg grating (TFBG) as integrated dispersive element is demonstrated. Based on a 45° UV-written PS750 TFBG a refractive spectrometer with 2.06 radiant/μm dispersion and a numerical aperture of 0.1 was set up and tested as integrated detector for an optical coherence tomography (OCT) system. Featuring a 23 mm long active region at the fiber the spectrum is projected via a cylindrical lens for vertical beam collimation and focused by an achromatic doublet onto the detector array. Covering 740 nm to 860 nm the spectrometer was optically connected to a broadband white light interferometer and a wide field scan head and electronically to an acquisition and control computer. Tomograms of ophthalmic and dermal samples obtained by the frequency domain OCT-system were obtained achieving 2.84 μm axial and 7.6 μm lateral resolution.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2015

Assessment of ultra-high resolution optical coherence tomography for monitoring tissue effects caused by laser photocoagulation of ex-vivo porcine retina

Patrick Steiner; Volker Enzmann; Sebastian Wolf; Anke Bossen; Christoph Meier; Raphael Sznitman

Retinal laser photocoagulation is an established and successful treatment for a variety of retinal diseases. While being a valuable treatment modality, laser photocoagulation shows the drawback of employing high energy lasers which are capable of physically destroying the neural retina. For reliable therapy, it is therefore crucial to closely monitor the therapy effects caused in the retinal tissue. A depth resolved representation of optical tissue properties as provided by optical coherence tomography may provide valuable information about the treatment effects in the retinal layers if recorded simultaneously to laser coagulation. Therefore, in this work, the use of ultra-high resolution optical coherence tomography to represent tissue changes caused by conventional and selective retinal photocoagulation is investigated. Laser lesions were placed on porcine retina ex-vivo using a 577 nm laser as well as a pulsed laser at 527 nm built for selective treatment of the retinal pigment epithelium. Applied energies were varied to generate lesions best representing the span from under- to overtreatment. The lesions were examined using a custom-designed optical coherence tomography system with an axial resolution of 1.78 μm and 70 kHz Ascan rate. Optical coherence tomography scans included volume scans before and after irradiation, as well as time lapse scans (Mscan) of the lesions. Results show OCT lesion visibility thresholds to be below the thresholds of ophthalmoscopic inspection. With the ultra-high resolution OCT, 42% - 44% of ophthalmoscopically invisible lesions could be detected and lesions that were under- or overexposed could be distinguished using the OCT data.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2014

Multi-channel near-infrared spectrometer for functional depth-resolved tissue examination and positioning applications

D. Ernst; M. Peyer; D. Täschler; Patrick Steiner; Anke Bossen; Boris Považay; Ch. Meier

We present a multi-channel spectrometer that allows simultaneous acquisition of up to eight channels in order to perform parallel optical coherence tomography or low coherence interferometry. The rigid and compact design is employed in polarization sensitive optical coherence tomography measurements. Furthermore it is employed in distances and wedgeangle measurements between two glass slides. The spectrometer operates at a central wavelength of 835 nm and at a spectral bandwidth of 45 nm. This facilitates an axial resolution of 7.7 μm. The key feature is the simultaneous acquisition of up to eight channels, at a maximum frame rate of 6.5 kHz. The sensitivity is 91 dB at an integration time of 11 μs and an optical power of 0.7 mW at each of the sample arms. We obtained polarization sensitive OCT images of technical and biological samples and investigated the system inherent phase stability to multipoint low coherence interferometry measurements.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2013

FPGA-based non-uniform fast Fourier transform (NUFFT) algorithm for real-time OCT signal processing

Anke Bossen; S. Remund; D. Ernst; Ch. Meier; T. von Niederhäusern; M. Duelk; Kalyanramu Vemishetty

We developed an FPGA-based engine for Fourier-domain OCT that performs real-time signal processing based on Non- Uniform Fast Fourier Transform (NUFFT). The basic NUFFT algorithm is discussed and compared with cubic-spline interpolation regarding efficient re-sampling in k-space with different phase nonlinearities of sinusoidal swept sources. The NUFFT algorithm was adapted for an implementation in an FPGA and its accuracy is analyzed and assessed using simulated numerical data. When implemented, the NUFFT algorithm allows a processing performance at a sampling rate of 100 MS/s. The real-time processing capability was tested with sinusoidal bi-directional swept sources with A-scan rates of 50 kHz.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2013

Polarization sensitive camera for the in vitro diagnostic and monitoring of dental erosion

Anke Bossen; Ekaterina Rakhmatullina; Adrian Lussi; Christoph Meier

Due to a frequent consumption of acidic food and beverages, the prevalence of dental erosion increases worldwide. In an initial erosion stage, the hard dental tissue is softened due to acidic demineralization. As erosion progresses, a gradual tissue wear occurs resulting in thinning of the enamel. Complete loss of the enamel tissue can be observed in severe clinical cases. Therefore, it is essential to provide a diagnosis tool for an accurate detection and monitoring of dental erosion already at early stages. In this manuscript, we present the development of a polarization sensitive imaging camera for the visualization and quantification of dental erosion. The system consists of two CMOS cameras mounted on two sides of a polarizing beamsplitter. A horizontal linearly polarized light source is positioned orthogonal to the camera to ensure an incidence illumination and detection angles of 45°. The specular reflected light from the enamel surface is collected with an objective lens mounted on the beam splitter and divided into horizontal (H) and vertical (V) components on each associate camera. Images of non-eroded and eroded enamel surfaces at different erosion degrees were recorded and assessed with diagnostic software. The software was designed to generate and display two types of images: distribution of the reflection intensity (V) and a polarization ratio (H-V)/(H+V) throughout the analyzed tissue area. The measurements and visualization of these two optical parameters, i.e. specular reflection intensity and the polarization ratio, allowed detection and quantification of enamel erosion at early stages in vitro.

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Christoph Meier

Bern University of Applied Sciences

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Boris Považay

Bern University of Applied Sciences

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Ch. Meier

Bern University of Applied Sciences

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Christoph Höschele

Bern University of Applied Sciences

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D. Ernst

Bern University of Applied Sciences

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Stefan Remund

Bern University of Applied Sciences

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