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1.
IEEE Trans Biomed Eng ; 70(4): 1231-1241, 2023 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36215340

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: Transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) is a non-invasive brain stimulation technique used to generate conduction currents in the head and disrupt brain functions. To rapidly evaluate the tDCS-induced current density in near real-time, this paper proposes a deep learning-based emulator, named DeeptDCS. METHODS: The emulator leverages Attention U-net taking the volume conductor models (VCMs) of head tissues as inputs and outputting the three-dimensional current density distribution across the entire head. The electrode configurations are also incorporated into VCMs without increasing the number of input channels; this enables the straightforward incorporation of the non-parametric features of electrodes (e.g., thickness, shape, size, and position) in the training and testing of the proposed emulator. RESULTS: Attention U-net outperforms standard U-net and its other three variants (Residual U-net, Attention Residual U-net, and Multi-scale Residual U-net) in terms of accuracy. The generalization ability of DeeptDCS to non-trained electrode configurations can be greatly enhanced through fine-tuning the model. The computational time required by one emulation via DeeptDCS is a fraction of a second. CONCLUSION: DeeptDCS is at least two orders of magnitudes faster than a physics-based open-source simulator, while providing satisfactorily accurate results. SIGNIFICANCE: The high computational efficiency permits the use of DeeptDCS in applications requiring its repetitive execution, such as uncertainty quantification and optimization studies of tDCS.


Subject(s)
Deep Learning , Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation , Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation/methods , Brain/physiology , Head , Electrodes
2.
J Acoust Soc Am ; 151(2): 1064, 2022 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35232103

ABSTRACT

The interior resonance problem of time domain integral equations (TDIEs) formulated to analyze acoustic field interactions on penetrable objects is investigated. Two types of TDIEs are considered: The first equation, which is termed the time domain potential integral equation (TDPIE), suffers from the interior resonance problem, i.e., its solution is replete with spurious modes that are excited at the resonance frequencies of the acoustic cavity in the shape of the scatterer. Numerical experiments demonstrate that, unlike the frequency-domain integral equations, the amplitude of these modes in the time domain could be suppressed to a level that does not significantly affect the solution. This is achieved by increasing the numerical solution accuracy through the use of a higher-order discretization in space and the band limited approximate prolate spheroidal wave function with high interpolation accuracy as basis function in time. The second equation is obtained by linearly combining TDPIE with its normal derivative. The solution of this equation, which is termed the time domain combined potential integral equation (TDCPIE), does not involve any spurious interior resonance modes but it is not as accurate as the TDPIE solution at non-resonance frequencies. In addition, TDCPIE's discretization calls for treatment of hypersingular integrals.

3.
J Acoust Soc Am ; 146(3): 2068, 2019 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31590563

ABSTRACT

A fully explicit marching-on-in-time (MOT) scheme for solving the time domain Kirchhoff (surface) integral equation to analyze transient acoustic scattering from rigid objects is presented. A higher-order Nyström method and a PE(CE)m-type ordinary differential equation integrator are used for spatial discretization and time marching, respectively. The resulting MOT scheme uses the same time step size as its implicit counterpart (which also uses Nyström method in space) without sacrificing from the accuracy and stability of the solution. Numerical results demonstrate the accuracy, efficiency, and applicability of the proposed explicit MOT solver.

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