Difference between revisions of "Slicer-IGT"
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'''Slicer for Image Guided Therapy''' is an open-source surgical navigation software for Image Guided Therapy. The software is an extension o 3D Slicer that is freely available, open-source software for visualization, registration, segmentation, and quantification of medical data. | '''Slicer for Image Guided Therapy''' is an open-source surgical navigation software for Image Guided Therapy. The software is an extension o 3D Slicer that is freely available, open-source software for visualization, registration, segmentation, and quantification of medical data. | ||
− | *Free open-source software | + | *Free open-source software for Image Guided Therapy research |
*Available for Windows, Mac, Linux | *Available for Windows, Mac, Linux | ||
− | *Access to state-of-art scientific medical image processing algorithm | + | *Access to state-of-art scientific medical image processing algorithm as well as most of commercial tracking device |
*Affiliated scientific workshops and seminars to discuss and exchange ideas | *Affiliated scientific workshops and seminars to discuss and exchange ideas | ||
− | *Increasing visibility of your IGT research to IGT community | + | *Increasing visibility of your IGT research to IGT community using popular software platform |
*Available for commercialization by concealing proprietary codes* | *Available for commercialization by concealing proprietary codes* | ||
Revision as of 15:20, 17 January 2007
Home < Slicer-IGTContents
Slicer for Image Guided Therapy is an open-source surgical navigation software for Image Guided Therapy. The software is an extension o 3D Slicer that is freely available, open-source software for visualization, registration, segmentation, and quantification of medical data.
- Free open-source software for Image Guided Therapy research
- Available for Windows, Mac, Linux
- Access to state-of-art scientific medical image processing algorithm as well as most of commercial tracking device
- Affiliated scientific workshops and seminars to discuss and exchange ideas
- Increasing visibility of your IGT research to IGT community using popular software platform
- Available for commercialization by concealing proprietary codes*
(*) Acknowledgement needed
Release notes with binary downloads
- Slicer for IGT version 2.6 Windows Linux Mac OS
- Stable version actively tested in MR-guided therapies. Not actively updated.
- Slicer for IGT version 3beta Windows Linux Mac OS
- In active development. Recommended for research.
Source Code Downloads and Documents
[For Developers] | For Clinicians | For Industrial Collaborators |
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Tutorial
- Slicer for IGT 2.6 Tutorial (Power Point)
- This presentation guide you to download and install Slicer version 2.6 for IGT, and mock-up navigation surgery using plastic skull.
- Slicer for IGT 3.0b Tutorial (Power Point)
- To be uploaded.
Screenshots
People
Nobuhiko Hata, PhD (Project Manager)
Simon DiMaio, PhD (Real-time image control)
Alex Golby, MD (Neurosurgery)
Haiying Liu, MS (Senior Programmer)
Eigil Samset, PhD (tracker control)
Clare Tempany, MD (Prostate Therapy)
Users/Collaborators/Sponsors
- List of collaborators
- List of sponsors
- Featured Slicer for IGT projects
- To be uploaded soon!
- Call for snapshots
- We are soliciting a snapshot of Slicer used in IGT. Please send an message to Nobuhiko Hata (hata {at-mark} bwh.harvard.edu} with the project description. Your contact info and snapshots will be listed in this page. Thank you!
Contact Information
Nobuhiko Hata, the lead developer for "Slicer for IGT" development team at National Center for Image Guided Therapy for more information. Email: hata {at-mark} bwh.harvard.edu
Disclaimer
Slicer and Slicer for IGT have been designed for research purposes only and has not been reviewed or approved by the Food and Drug Administration or by any other agency. YOU ACKNOWLEDGE AND AGREE THAT CLINICAL APPLICATIONS ARE NEITHER RECOMMENDED NOR ADVISED. Read the [license for Slicer] for more detail. One may use Slicer for IGT in clinical studies by obtaining approval from one's own institution through its own IRB certification procedure and use the software on one's own risk. The example clinical cases listed in this website are either from mock-up validation study or clinical validation study approved by IRB who weighed the merit against the risk of using Slicer for IGT not recommended for clinical use. For more information about the human clinical trials, visit NIH-NCI web site [1].