Difference between revisions of "2007 Annual Scientific Report"

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==== Key Investigators ====
 
==== Key Investigators ====
  
* BWH: Martha Shenton, Marek Kubicki, Marc Niethammer, Sylvain Bouix, Katharina Quintus,  
+
* BWH: Martha Shenton, Marek Kubicki, Marc Niethammer, Sylvain Bouix, Katharina Quintus, Mark Dreusicke, Carl-Fredrik Westin, Raul San Jose, Gordon Kindlmann, Doug Markant
  Mark Dreusicke, Carl-Fredrik Westin, Raul San Jose, Gordon Kindlmann, Doug Markant
 
 
* Harvard/MGH: Bruce Fischl, Denis Jen, David Kennedy
 
* Harvard/MGH: Bruce Fischl, Denis Jen, David Kennedy
 
* MIT: Lauren O'Donnell
 
* MIT: Lauren O'Donnell

Revision as of 17:07, 21 April 2007

Home < 2007 Annual Scientific Report

Back to 2007_Progress_Report

For reference:

1. Introduction (Marty Shenton)

2. Four Main Themes

This year's activities focus on four main themes: Diffusion Image Analysis, Structural Analysis, Functional MRI Analysis, and the NA-MIC Kit. Each of the following sections begins with an overview of the theme, provides a progress update and list of key investigators, and concludes with a set of links to additional information for individual projects in that theme.

These thematic activities involve scientists from each of the 7 NA-MIC cores (Appendix).

  • Core 1 Algorithms-Ross Whitaker PI
  • Core 2 Engineering-Will Schroeder PI
  • Core 3 DBP1-Martha Shenton PI / DBP2-Andy Saykin PI / DBP3-Steven Potkin PI
  • Core 4 Service-Will Schroeder PI
  • Core 5 Training-Randy Gollub PI
  • Core 6 Dissemination-Tina Kapur Co-PI; Steve Pieper Co-PI
  • Core 7 Leadership-Ron Kikinis

2.1 Diffusion Image Analysis Theme (Marek Kubicki, Guido Gerig)

Progress

Key Investigators

  • BWH: Martha Shenton, Marek Kubicki, Marc Niethammer, Sylvain Bouix, Katharina Quintus, Mark Dreusicke, Carl-Fredrik Westin, Raul San Jose, Gordon Kindlmann, Doug Markant
  • Harvard/MGH: Bruce Fischl, Denis Jen, David Kennedy
  • MIT: Lauren O'Donnell
  • UCI: James Fallon, Martina Panzenboeck
  • UNC: Guido Gerig, Isabelle Corouge, Casey Goodlett, Martin Styner
  • Utah: Tom Fletcher, Ross Whitaker, Saurav Basu
  • Georgia Tech: Eric Pichon, John Melonakos, Xavier LeFaucheur, Allen Tannenbaum
  • Dartmouth: John West, Andrew Saykin, Laura Flashman, Paul Wang, Heather Pixley, Robert Roth
  • Isomics: Steve Pieper

Additional Information

For details of each of the projects in this theme, please see NA-MIC Projects on Diffusion Image Analysis.

2.2 Structural Analysis Theme (Allen Tannenbaum, Martin Styner)

Progress

Key Investigators

  • MIT: Kilian Pohl, Sandy Wells, Eric Grimson
  • UNC: Martin Styner, Ipek Oguz, Guido Gerig
  • Utah: Ross Whitaker, Suyash Awate, Tolga Tasdizen, Tom Fletcher, Joshua Cates, Miriah Meyer
  • GaTech: Allen Tannenbaum, John Melonakos, Tauseef ur Rehman, Shawn Lankton, Ramsey Al-Hakim, Eric Pichon, Delphine Nain, Oleg Michailovich, Yogesh Rathi, James Malcolm
  • Steve Pieper, Bill Lorensen, Luis Ibanez, Karthik Krishnan, Michael J. Pan, Jagadeeswaran Rajendiran, Jim Miller, Karthik Krishnan, Luis Ibanez
  • Harvard PNL: Sylvain Bouix, Motoaki Nakamura, Min-Seong Koo, Martha Shenton, Marc Niethammer, Jim Levitt
  • Dartmouth: Andrew Saykin
  • UCI: James Fallon

Additional Information

For details of each of the projects in this theme, please see NA-MIC Projects on Structural Image Analysis.

2.3 Functional MRI Analysis Theme (Polina Golland, Andy Saykin)

Path Analysis?

2.4 NA-MIC Kit Theme (Will Schroeder)

Progress

Key Investigators

  • GE: Bill Lorensen, Jim Miller, Xiaodong Tao, Dan Blezek
  • Isomics: Steve Pieper, Alex Yarmarkovich
  • Kitware: Will Schroeder, Luis Ibanez, Karthik Krishnan, Andy Cedilnik, Sebastien Barre, Mathieu Malaterre
  • UCLA: Mike Pan, Jagadeeswaran Rajendiran
  • UCSD: Neil Jones, Jeffrey Grethe
  • Harvard: Nicole Aucoin, Katie Hayes, Wendy Plesniak, Mike Halle, Gordon Kindlmann, Raul San Jose Estepar, Haiying Liu, Ron Kikinis
  • MIT: Lauren O'Donnell, Kilian Pohl

Additional Information

For details of each of the projects in this theme, please see NA-MIC Kit Projects.

3. Highlights (Will Schroeder)

4. Impact and Value to Biocomputing (Jim Miller)

4.1 Impact within the Center

4.2 Impact within NIH Funded Research

4.3 National and International Impact

5.NA-MIC Timeline (Ross Whitaker)

This section provides a table of NAMIC timelines from the original proposal that graphically depicts completed tasks/goals in years 1, 2, and 3 and tasks/goals to be completed in years 4-5. Changes to the original timelines have also been described.

2007 Scientific Report Timeline

6. EAB Report

The NA-MIC External Advisory Board (EAB), chaired by Prof. Chris Johnson of the University of Utah, met at the annual All-Hands Meeting. After individual presentations by NA-MIC investigators and open as well as closed-door EAB discussion, the Board provided its independent expert assessment of the Center (Appendix 2).

Logistics

Schedule and process for preparation of this report

  • March 30 - Assign section/theme leads (Ron). Last year: introduction (marty), structural analysis (allen, martin), dti (guido, marty/marek), fmri (polina, andy), namic kit(bill), timeline (ross), highlights (will), impact (bill).
  • April 7,10 - tcons with Marty, Ross, Will, Tina to finalize the layout, process, and timeline of report.
  • April 13 - update projects list using last year's NA-MIC_Collaborations and projects pursued at the half week in SLC. Remind investigators to update individual pages. (Tina)
  • April 23- complete project description pages in updated list: NA-MIC_Collaborations (all project owners).
  • April 30 - complete section summaries, introduction, highlights, impact, timeline (owners of these topics)
  • May 3 - submit wiki report to NA-MIC editor, Ann (Tina)
  • May 17 - submit Edited report to Rachana (Ann)
  • May 31 - ship final package to NIH (Rachana)

Guidelines from NIH Program Officer

The following guidelines were provided by Grace Peng, NA-MIC program officer, in Feb 2006.

The key is to synthesize all the individual elements into bigger picture stories that really speak of each area’s impact to the community.

The specialized scientific report should have the following format:

  1. Introductory page describing the new grouping of NAMIC project themes.
  2. A description of progress in each NAMIC project theme (not to exceed 2 pages each), tying together relevant activities from participating subcomponents and referencing cores in parentheses.
  3. A table of NAMIC timelines (from original proposal), graphically depicting completed tasks/goals in years 1,2, and 3 and tasks/goals to be completed in years 4-5. Changes to the original timelines should be described.
  4. A description of 3 highlights selected from all NAMIC projects to showcase NAMIC.
  5. A discussion of NAMIC’s impact and value to the biocomputing community this year.