Difference between revisions of "NA"

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  Back to [[NA-MIC_Collaborations|NA-MIC_Collaborations]]
 
  Back to [[NA-MIC_Collaborations|NA-MIC_Collaborations]]
  
'''Objective:''' To provide the infrastructure necessary to represent, manage, and transform between the variety of coordinate frames used in medical imaging.
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'''Objective:''' To develop and disseminate learner oriented, tutorials and workshops that educate software developers and end-users about medical image analysis as they are being trained to use the NA-MIC toolkit.
  
<br />'''Progress:''' A new image class, itk::OrientedImage, has been developed and added to ITK. This image class caches the image direction cosines. ITK's IO mechanisms have been updated to read and write orientation information. Filters which implictly manipulate orientation (flip, resample, etc.) have been modified to explictly modify the cached image orientation.
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'''Progress:''' This year we delivered over 300 slides as part of 8 self-guided tutorials that include pre-processed, anonymized data sets on our Slicer 101 web page that had over 2000 hits in 200 days. More than 300 people attended the 11 workshops we offered this year at local NA-MIC sites, national conferences, and international meetings.
  
 
'''Key Investigators:'''
 
'''Key Investigators:'''
  
* GE Research: Bill Lorensen, Jim Miller
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* Randy Gollub (MGH)
* Isomics: Steve Pieper
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* Guido Gerig (UNC)
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* Martha Shenton, Sonia Pujol (BWH)
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* Ross Whitaker (Utah)
  
'''Links:'''
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<br />'''Links:'''
  
* [http://www.itk.org/Wiki/Proposals:Orientation Image Orientation in ITK]
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* [[Training:Events_Timeline|Training Events]]
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* [[Slicer:Workshops:User_Training_101|Slicer 101 ]]

Revision as of 13:29, 18 December 2006

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Objective: To develop and disseminate learner oriented, tutorials and workshops that educate software developers and end-users about medical image analysis as they are being trained to use the NA-MIC toolkit.

Progress: This year we delivered over 300 slides as part of 8 self-guided tutorials that include pre-processed, anonymized data sets on our Slicer 101 web page that had over 2000 hits in 200 days. More than 300 people attended the 11 workshops we offered this year at local NA-MIC sites, national conferences, and international meetings.

Key Investigators:

  • Randy Gollub (MGH)
  • Guido Gerig (UNC)
  • Martha Shenton, Sonia Pujol (BWH)
  • Ross Whitaker (Utah)


Links: