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Partial coherence tomography (or optical coherence tomography) uses signals obtained with partial interferometry techniques to synthesize tomographic images. Being still under evolution this technique has already been successfully applied in the clinic. We discuss the underlying principles and present some results obtained at the fundus of the eye.
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Adolf Friedrich Fercher, Wolfgang Drexler, Christoph K. Hitzenberger, "Ocular partial coherence tomography," Proc. SPIE 2732, CIS Selected Papers: Coherence-Domain Methods in Biomedical Optics, (9 February 1996); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.231679