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SWENet: a physics-informed deep neural network (PINN) for shear wave elastography (2210.00556v1)

Published 2 Oct 2022 in cond-mat.soft, physics.bio-ph, and physics.med-ph

Abstract: Shear wave elastography (SWE) enables the measurement of elastic properties of soft materials, including soft tissues, in a non-invasive manner and finds broad applications in a variety of disciplines. The state-of-the-art SWE methods commercialized in various instruments rely on the measurement of shear wave velocities to infer material parameters and have relatively low resolution and accuracy for inhomogeneous soft materials due to the complexity of wave fields. In the present study, we overcome this challenge by proposing a physics-informed neural network (PINN)-based SWE (SWENet) method considering the merits of PINN in solving an inverse problem. The spatial variation of elastic properties of inhomogeneous materials has been defined in governing equations, which are encoded in PINN as loss functions. Snapshots of wave motion inside a local region have been used to train the neural networks, and during this course, the spatial distribution of elastic properties is inferred simultaneously. Both finite element simulations and tissue-mimicking phantom experiments have been performed to validate the method. Our results show that the shear moduli of soft composites consisting of matrix and inclusions of several millimeters in cross-section dimensions with either regular or irregular geometries can be identified with good accuracy. The advantages of the SWENet over conventional SWE methods consist of using more features of the wave motion in inhomogeneous soft materials and enabling seamless integration of multi-source data in the inverse analysis. Given the advantages of the reported method, it may find applications including but not limited to mechanical characterization of artificial soft biomaterials, imaging elastic properties of nerves in vivo, and differentiating small malignant tumors from benign ones by quantitatively measuring their distinct stiffnesses.

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