S
Stephen A. Boppart
Researcher at University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign
Publications - 684
Citations - 33772
Stephen A. Boppart is an academic researcher from University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign. The author has contributed to research in topics: Optical coherence tomography & Laser. The author has an hindex of 90, co-authored 631 publications receiving 31497 citations. Previous affiliations of Stephen A. Boppart include Harvard University & Boston University.
Papers
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Book ChapterDOI
Optical Coherence Tomography Principles, Instrumentation, and Biological Applicatons
Eric A. Swanson,M. R. Hee,G. J. Tearney,B. Boumar,Stephen A. Boppart,Joseph A. Izatt,J. G. Fujimoto,Mark E. Brezinski,Joel S. Schuman,Carmen A. Puliafito +9 more
TL;DR: The design and performance of various OCT system implementations and present measurements on a variety of biological tissues are described and the relative merits of OCT compared to other optical imaging modalities will be addressed.
Journal ArticleDOI
Mechanical contrast in spectroscopic magnetomotive optical coherence elastography.
TL;DR: The feasibility of generating MM-OCE elastograms in heterogeneous samples based on a spectroscopic approach which involves measuring the magnetomotive response at different excitation frequencies is evaluated.
Journal ArticleDOI
Non-invasive monitoring of pharmacodynamics during the skin wound healing process using multimodal optical microscopy.
Jose J. Rico-Jimenez,Jang Hyuk Lee,Aneesh Alex,Salma Musaad,Eric J. Chaney,Ronit Barkalifa,Eric Olson,David F. Adams,Marina Marjanovic,Zane Arp,Stephen A. Boppart +10 more
TL;DR: The capability of multimodal optical imaging to non-invasively monitor various physiological aspects of the wound healing process has been demonstrated and become a promising tool in the development of better diagnostic, treatment, and monitoring strategies for diabetic wound care.
Journal ArticleDOI
Aberration characterization for the optimal design of high-resolution endoscopic optical coherence tomography catheters.
TL;DR: It was found that, while chromatic aberration did not preclude achieving high resolution, astigmatism posed a major technical difficulty, because its correction requires a very sensitive adjustment of parameters, especially for catheters with long working distances.
Journal ArticleDOI
Emergency ventilator for COVID-19.
William P. King,Jennifer R. Amos,Magdi Naim Azer,Daniel H. Baker,Rashid Bashir,Catherine Best,Eliot Bethke,Stephen A. Boppart,Elisabeth Bralts,Ryan M. Corey,Rachael Dietkus,Gary Durack,Stefan Elbel,Stefan Elbel,Greg Elliott,Jake Fava,Nigel Goldenfeld,Molly H. Goldstein,Courtney Hayes,Nicole Herndon,Shandra Jamison,Blake Everett Johnson,Harley T. Johnson,Mark Johnson,Mark Johnson,John Kolaczynski,Tonghun Lee,Sergei Maslov,Davis J. McGregor,Derek J. Milner,Ralf Moller,Jonathan Mosley,Andy Musser,Max Newberger,David Null,Lucas O’Bryan,Michael L. Oelze,Jerry O’Leary,Alex Pagano,Michael L. Philpott,Brian Pianfetti,Alex Pille,Luca Pizzuto,Brian Ricconi,Marcello Rubessa,Sam Rylowicz,Clifford F. Shipley,Andrew C. Singer,Brian Stewart,Rachel Switzky,Sameh Tawfick,Matthew B. Wheeler,Karen White,Karen White,Evan M. Widloski,Eric J. Wood,Charles E. Wood,Abigail R. Wooldridge +57 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors describe the rapid design, prototyping, and testing of an emergency ventilator (EV) that can control a patient's peak inspiratory pressure and breathing rate, while keeping a positive end expiratory pressure (PEEP).