“…11 Bickel et al 12 demonstrated that polarization in light scattering could be used as an effective tool in biological study. Various biological tissues, including tissues from cardiac muscle, brain, liver, kidney cortex, loin muscle, and tendon of pigs, [13][14][15][16] tissues from heart, brain, retina, kidney, and spleen of rats, 17 cardiac tissues of Lewis rats, 18,19 human breast cancer tissues, [20][21][22] and invasive breast cancer specimens, [23][24][25] have been characterized using a wide variety of optical modalities such as polarimetric light microscopy (PLM), [23][24][25] linear polarization spectroscopy, [23][24][25] Mueller polarimetry, 26 near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS), [20][21][22]27 and optical coherence tomography (OCT). 13,14 Sprenger et al 23 devised a quantitative approach for assessing the tumor's stroma ratio by combining PLM and linear polarization in breast cancer specimens.…”