pubmed-article:19272911 | rdf:type | pubmed:Citation | lld:pubmed |
pubmed-article:19272911 | lifeskim:mentions | umls-concept:C0010031 | lld:lifeskim |
pubmed-article:19272911 | lifeskim:mentions | umls-concept:C0542341 | lld:lifeskim |
pubmed-article:19272911 | lifeskim:mentions | umls-concept:C0205148 | lld:lifeskim |
pubmed-article:19272911 | lifeskim:mentions | umls-concept:C1257972 | lld:lifeskim |
pubmed-article:19272911 | lifeskim:mentions | umls-concept:C0870071 | lld:lifeskim |
pubmed-article:19272911 | pubmed:issue | 2 | lld:pubmed |
pubmed-article:19272911 | pubmed:dateCreated | 2009-4-3 | lld:pubmed |
pubmed-article:19272911 | pubmed:abstractText | High-speed videokeratoscopy is an emerging technique that enables study of the corneal surface and tear-film dynamics. Unlike its static predecessor, this new technique results in a very large amount of digital data for which storage needs become significant. We aimed to design a compression technique that would use mathematical functions to parsimoniously fit corneal surface data with a minimum number of coefficients. Since the Zernike polynomial functions that have been traditionally used for modeling corneal surfaces may not necessarily correctly represent given corneal surface data in terms of its optical performance, we introduced the concept of Zernike polynomial-based rational functions. Modeling optimality criteria were employed in terms of both the rms surface error as well as the point spread function cross-correlation. The parameters of approximations were estimated using a nonlinear least-squares procedure based on the Levenberg-Marquardt algorithm. A large number of retrospective videokeratoscopic measurements were used to evaluate the performance of the proposed rational-function-based modeling approach. The results indicate that the rational functions almost always outperform the traditional Zernike polynomial approximations with the same number of coefficients. | lld:pubmed |
pubmed-article:19272911 | pubmed:language | eng | lld:pubmed |
pubmed-article:19272911 | pubmed:journal | http://linkedlifedata.com/r... | lld:pubmed |
pubmed-article:19272911 | pubmed:citationSubset | IM | lld:pubmed |
pubmed-article:19272911 | pubmed:status | MEDLINE | lld:pubmed |
pubmed-article:19272911 | pubmed:month | Feb | lld:pubmed |
pubmed-article:19272911 | pubmed:issn | 1558-2531 | lld:pubmed |
pubmed-article:19272911 | pubmed:author | pubmed-author:SchneiderMart... | lld:pubmed |
pubmed-article:19272911 | pubmed:author | pubmed-author:IskanderD... | lld:pubmed |
pubmed-article:19272911 | pubmed:author | pubmed-author:CollinsMichae... | lld:pubmed |
pubmed-article:19272911 | pubmed:issnType | Electronic | lld:pubmed |
pubmed-article:19272911 | pubmed:volume | 56 | lld:pubmed |
pubmed-article:19272911 | pubmed:owner | NLM | lld:pubmed |
pubmed-article:19272911 | pubmed:authorsComplete | Y | lld:pubmed |
pubmed-article:19272911 | pubmed:pagination | 493-9 | lld:pubmed |
pubmed-article:19272911 | pubmed:dateRevised | 2009-11-11 | lld:pubmed |
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pubmed-article:19272911 | pubmed:year | 2009 | lld:pubmed |
pubmed-article:19272911 | pubmed:articleTitle | Modeling corneal surfaces with rational functions for high-speed videokeratoscopy data compression. | lld:pubmed |
pubmed-article:19272911 | pubmed:affiliation | Signal Processing Group, Institute of Telecommunications, Technical University of Darmstadt, Darmstadt 64285, Germany. post@martinschneider.name | lld:pubmed |
pubmed-article:19272911 | pubmed:publicationType | Journal Article | lld:pubmed |