“…For clinicians or radiologists, “seeing is believing”. In the last several years, several clinical studies on PAT/US dual-modality were reported, including human thyroid ( Dima and Ntziachristos, 2016 ; Yang et al, 2017 ; Kim et al, 2021 ), breast ( Garcia-Uribe et al, 2015 ; Becker et al, 2018 ; Neuschler et al, 2017 ; Nyayapathi and Xia, 2019 ; Kelly et al, 2020 ; Goh et al, 2019 ; Yang et al, 2020 ), skin ( Oraevsky et al, 2018 ; Park et al, 2021 ), extremities ( Xia et al, 2015 ; Mercep et al, 2015 ; Liu and Zhang, 2016 ; Kim et al, 2016 ; Jo et al, 2017 ; Oeri et al, 2017 ; van den Berg et al, 2017 ; Feng et al, 2020 ; Daoudi et al, 2021 ), prostate ( Agrawal et al, 2020 ; Kothapalli et al, 2019 ), bowels ( Knieling et al, 2017 ; Leng et al, 2018 ; Yang et al, 2019 ), vascular ( Karpiouk et al, 2012 ; Wu et al, 2015 ; Andrei et al, 2021), placenta ( Xia et al, 2015 ; Maneas et al, 2020 ) and others ( Jose et al, 2009 ; Gonzalez et al, 2021 ; Mozaffarzadeh et al, 2021 ). With the combination of the two modalities in one imaging system, it is acceptable for radiologists or clinicians to adapt and associate morphological features with functional information.…”