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Jens Munk Hansen

Researcher at Technical University of Denmark

Publications -  26
Citations -  643

Jens Munk Hansen is an academic researcher from Technical University of Denmark. The author has contributed to research in topics: Synthetic aperture radar & Imaging phantom. The author has an hindex of 11, co-authored 26 publications receiving 633 citations. Previous affiliations of Jens Munk Hansen include University of Copenhagen.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Ultrasound research scanner for real-time synthetic aperture data acquisition

TL;DR: The overall system concept is presented along with its implementation and examples of B-mode and in vivo synthetic aperture flow imaging, and the system is capable of performing real-time beamforming for conventional imaging methods using linear, phased, and convex arrays.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Experimental ultrasound system for real-time synthetic imaging

TL;DR: A real-time system that will be capable of performing the processing for the currently available imaging methods, and will make it possible to perform initial trials in a clinical environment with new imaging modalities for synthetic aperture imaging, 2D and 3D B-mode and velocity imaging.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

An object-oriented multi-threaded software beamformation toolbox

TL;DR: An effective and versatile Matlab toolbox written in C++ has been developed to assist in developing new beam formation strategies and is a general 3D implementation capable of handling a multitude of focusing methods, interpolation schemes, and parametric and dynamic apodization.
Journal ArticleDOI

Comparison of Real-Time In Vivo Spectral and Vector Velocity Estimation

TL;DR: Vector flow can measure the angle for spectral angle correction, thus eliminating the bias from the radiologist performing the angle setting with spectral estimation, and the flow angle limitation in velocity estimation is eliminated, so that flow at any angle can be measured.
Journal ArticleDOI

Implementation of a versatile research data acquisition system using a commercially available medical ultrasound scanner

TL;DR: The design and implementation of a versatile, open-architecture research data acquisition system using a commercially available medical ultrasound scanner is described to allow researchers and clinicians to rapidly develop applications and move them relatively easy to the clinic.