Difference between revisions of "Main Page"

From NAMIC Wiki
Jump to: navigation, search
m (Fix MediaWiki table formatting issue discovered while converting to GitHub Flavored Markdown using pandoc (via https://github.com/outofcontrol/mediawiki-to-gfm))
Tag: 2017 source edit
 
(150 intermediate revisions by 19 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
Hacked By TehLiqE
+
__NOTOC__
  
 +
[[Image:NIHlogo.png|100px]][[Image:NIHHHS-logo.png|60px]]
  
WwW.StaticStroke.orG
+
These wiki pages are used to curate meetings and events of interest to developers and users of open source software for medical image computing.  
  
Bu Site Static Stroke Team tarafindan Deface Edilmistir
+
NA-MIC was founded as a multi-institutional, interdisciplinary team of computer scientists, software engineers, and medical investigators to develop computational tools for the analysis and visualization of medical image data.  It was funded from 2004-2015 using a grant, U54 EB005149, from the NIBIB NIH HHS.  NA-MIC created infrastructure and environment for the development of computational algorithms and open-source technologies, and created training and dissemination mechanisms for these tools to be distributed to the medical research community. 
  
TehLiqE and The Kv TurkeY
+
'''While NA-MIC itself is no longer a funded research effort, many research projects driven by NA-MIC technologies continue.''' 
 +
 
 +
{|
 +
|[[Image:Slicer4Announcement-HiRes.png|400px|align:"top"]]
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
Please visit the [[Events]] page to learn about meetings that to take place to continue biomedical research seeded by NA-MIC.
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|Slicer 4.10 released in November 2018. See the [https://www.slicer.org/wiki/Documentation/4.10/Announcements Announcement] for more information.
 +
|}

Latest revision as of 04:55, 11 April 2023


NIHlogo.pngNIHHHS-logo.png

These wiki pages are used to curate meetings and events of interest to developers and users of open source software for medical image computing.

NA-MIC was founded as a multi-institutional, interdisciplinary team of computer scientists, software engineers, and medical investigators to develop computational tools for the analysis and visualization of medical image data. It was funded from 2004-2015 using a grant, U54 EB005149, from the NIBIB NIH HHS. NA-MIC created infrastructure and environment for the development of computational algorithms and open-source technologies, and created training and dissemination mechanisms for these tools to be distributed to the medical research community.

While NA-MIC itself is no longer a funded research effort, many research projects driven by NA-MIC technologies continue.

align:"top"

Please visit the Events page to learn about meetings that to take place to continue biomedical research seeded by NA-MIC.

Slicer 4.10 released in November 2018. See the Announcement for more information.