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A method is described for the characterization of measurement errors with non-uniform variance (heteroscedastic noise) in contiguous signal vectors (e.g., spectra, chromatograms) that does not require the use of replicated measurements. High-pass digital filters based on inverted Blackman windowed sinc smoothing coefficients are employed to provide point estimates of noise from measurement vectors. Filter parameters (number of points, cutoff frequency) are selected based on the amplitude spectrum of the signal in the Fourier domain. Following this, noise estimates from multiple signals are partitioned into bins based on a variable that correlates with the noise amplitude, such as measurement channel or signal intensity. The noise estimates in each bin are combined to estimate the standard deviation and, where appropriate, a functional model of the noise can be obtained to characterize instrumental errors (e.g., shot noise, proportional noise). The proposed method is demonstrated and evaluated with both simulated and experimental data sets, and results are compared with replicated measurements. Experimental data includes fluorescence spectra, ion chromatograms from liquid chromatography/mass spectrometry, and UV-vis absorbance spectra. The limitations and advantages of the new method compared to replicate analysis are presented.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.aca.2014.08.007 | DOI Listing |
J Appl Clin Med Phys
September 2025
Department of Radiation Oncology, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, Virginia, USA.
Purpose: Real‑time magnetic resonance-guided radiation therapy (MRgRT) integrates MRI with a linear accelerator (Linac) for gating and adaptive radiotherapy, which requires robust image‑quality assurance over a large field of view (FOV). Specialized phantoms capable of accommodating this extensive FOV are therefore essential. This study compares the performance of four commercial MRI phantoms on a 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Appl Clin Med Phys
September 2025
Clinical Imaging Physics Group, Duke University Health System, Durham, North Carolina, USA.
Introduction: Medical physicists play a critical role in ensuring image quality and patient safety, but their routine evaluations are limited in scope and frequency compared to the breadth of clinical imaging practices. An electronic radiologist feedback system can augment medical physics oversight for quality improvement. This work presents a novel quality feedback system integrated into the Epic electronic medical record (EMR) at a university hospital system, designed to facilitate feedback from radiologists to medical physicists and technologist leaders.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Microbiol
September 2025
Division of Computational Pathology, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, MA, USA.
Although dynamical systems models are a powerful tool for analysing microbial ecosystems, challenges in learning these models from complex microbiome datasets and interpreting their outputs limit use. We introduce the Microbial Dynamical Systems Inference Engine 2 (MDSINE2), a Bayesian method that learns compact and interpretable ecosystems-scale dynamical systems models from microbiome timeseries data. Microbial dynamics are modelled as stochastic processes driven by interaction modules, or groups of microbes with similar interaction structure and responses to perturbations, and additionally, noise characteristics of data are modelled.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLight Sci Appl
September 2025
State Key Laboratory of Quantum Optics Technologies and Devices, Institute of Opto-Electronics, Shanxi University, 030006, Taiyuan, China.
The dominant technical noise of a free-running laser practically limits bright squeezed light generation, particularly within the MHz band. To overcome this, we develop a comprehensive theoretical model for nonclassical power stabilization, and propose a novel bright squeezed light generation scheme incorporating hybrid power noise suppression. Our approach integrates broadband passive power stabilization with nonclassical active stabilization, extending the feedback bandwidth to MHz frequencies.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLight Sci Appl
September 2025
Laboratory of Quantum Information, University of Science and Technology of China, 230026, Hefei, China.
Quantum imaging with spatially entangled photons offers advantages such as enhanced spatial resolution, robustness against noise, and counterintuitive phenomena, while a biphoton spatial aberration generally degrades its performance. Biphoton aberration correction has been achieved by using classical beams to detect the aberration source or scanning the correction phase on biphotons if the source is unreachable. Here, a new method named position-correlated biphoton Shack-Hartmann wavefront sensing is introduced, where the phase pattern added on photon pairs with a strong position correlation is reconstructed from their position centroid distribution at the back focal plane of a microlens array.
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