Patents by Inventor Steven Tilley

Steven Tilley has filed for patents to protect the following inventions. This listing includes patent applications that are pending as well as patents that have already been granted by the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO).

  • Patent number: 11717240
    Abstract: The present invention is directed to spatial-spectral filtering for multi-material CT decomposition. The invention includes a specialized filter that spectrally shapes an x-ray beam into a number of beamlets with different spectra. The filter allows decomposition of an object/anatomy into different material categories (including different biological types: muscle, fat, etc. or exogenous contrast agents that have been introduced: e.g iodine, gadolinium, etc.). The x-ray beam is spectrally modulated across the face of the detector using a repeating pattern of filter materials. Such spatial-spectral filters allow for collection of many different spectral channels using “source-side” control. However, in contrast to other spectral techniques that provide mathematically complete projection data, spatial-spectral filtered data is sparse in each spectral channel—making traditional projection-domain or image-domain material decomposition difficult to apply.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: October 25, 2019
    Date of Patent: August 8, 2023
    Assignee: The Johns Hopkins University
    Inventors: Joseph Webster Stayman, Steven Tilley
  • Publication number: 20210307707
    Abstract: The present invention is directed to spatial-spectral filtering for multi-material CT decomposition. The invention includes a specialized filter that spectrally shapes an x-ray beam into a number of beamlets with different spectra. The filter allows decomposition of an object/anatomy into different material categories (including different biological types: muscle, fat, etc. or exogenous contrast agents that have been introduced: e.g iodine, gadolinium, etc.). The x-ray beam is spectrally modulated across the face of the detector using a repeating pattern of filter materials. Such spatial-spectral filters allow for collection of many different spectral channels using “source-side” control. However, in contrast to other spectral techniques that provide mathematically complete projection data, spatial-spectral filtered data is sparse in each spectral channel—making traditional projection-domain or image-domain material decomposition difficult to apply.
    Type: Application
    Filed: October 25, 2019
    Publication date: October 7, 2021
    Inventors: Joseph Webster Stayman, Steven Tilley
  • Patent number: 10394008
    Abstract: Optical sensing techniques and devices based on detection of fluorescent emissions at different optical wavelengths by nonlinear optical absorption of different excitation beams at different excitation wavelengths that interact with fluorescently-labeled structures within the sample to cause nonlinear optical absorption of two or more photons at each excitation wavelength. The fluorescent light at different fluorescent emission wavelengths by nonlinear optical absorption of excitation light at a particular excitation wavelength is spectrally separated into different optical channel output beams along different optical channel optical paths at different designated fluorescent imaging wavelength bands and the fluorescent light at different fluorescent imaging wavelengths within each designated fluorescent imaging wavelength is detected.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: October 19, 2017
    Date of Patent: August 27, 2019
    Assignee: Cornell University
    Inventors: Amanda J. Bares, Chris B. Schaffer, Steven Tilley
  • Publication number: 20180196246
    Abstract: Optical sensing techniques and devices based on detection of fluorescent emissions at different optical wavelengths by nonlinear optical absorption of different excitation beams at different excitation wavelengths that interact with fluorescently-labeled structures within the sample to cause nonlinear optical absorption of two or more photons at each excitation wavelength. The fluorescent light at different fluorescent emission wavelengths by nonlinear optical absorption of excitation light at a particular excitation wavelength is spectrally separated into different optical channel output beams along different optical channel optical paths at different designated fluorescent imaging wavelength bands and the fluorescent light at different fluorescent imaging wavelengths within each designated fluorescent imaging wavelength is detected.
    Type: Application
    Filed: October 19, 2017
    Publication date: July 12, 2018
    Applicant: Cornell University
    Inventors: Amanda J. Bares, Chris B. Schaffer, Steven Tilley