2017 Winter Project Week
Welcome to the web page for the 24th Project Week!
The 24th NA-MIC Project Week open source hackathon is being held during the week of January 9-13, 2017 at MIT. Please go through this page for information, and if you have questions, please contact Tina Kapur, PhD.
Logistics
- Dates: January 9-13, 2017.
- Location: MIT CSAIL, Cambridge, MA. (Rooms: Kiva, R&D)
- REGISTRATION: Register here. Registration Fee: $330.
- Hotel: Similar to previous years, no rooms have been blocked in a particular hotel.
Introduction
The National Alliance for Medical Image Computing (NAMIC), was founded in 2005 and chartered with building a computational infrastructure to support biomedical research as part of the NIH funded NCBC program. The work of this alliance has resulted in important progress in algorithmic research, an open source medical image computing platform 3D Slicer, enhancements to the underlying building blocks VTK, ITK, CMake, and CDash, and the creation of a community of algorithm researchers, biomedical scientists and software engineers who are committed to open science. This community meets twice a year in an open source hackathon event called Project Week.
Project Week is a semi-annual open source hackathon which draws 60-120 researchers. As of August 2014, it is a MICCAI endorsed event. The participants work collaboratively on open-science solutions for problems that lie on the interfaces of the fields of computer science, mechanical engineering, biomedical engineering, and medicine. In contrast to conventional conferences and workshops the primary focus of the Project Weeks is to make progress in projects (as opposed to reporting about progress). The objective of the Project Weeks is to provide a venue for this community of medical open source software creators. Project Weeks are open to all, are publicly advertised, and are funded through fees paid by the attendees. Participants are encouraged to stay for the entire event.
Project Week activities: Everyone shows up with a project. Some people are working on the platform. Some people are developing algorithms. Some people are applying the tools to their research problems. We begin the week by introducing projects and connecting teams. We end the week by reporting progress. In addition to the ongoing working sessions, breakout sessions are organized ad-hoc on a variety of special topics. These topics include: discussions of software architecture, presentations of new features and approaches and topics such as Image-Guided Therapy.
Several funded projects use the Project Week as a place to convene and collaborate. These include NAC, NCIGT, QIICR, and OCAIRO.
A summary of all previous Project Events is available here.
This project week is an event endorsed by the MICCAI society.
Please make sure that you are on the NA-MIC Project Week mailing list
Conference Calls for Preparation
Conference call phone number and notes are available here.
Agenda
Time | Monday, January 9 | Tuesday, January 10 | Wednesday, January 11 | Thursday, January 12 | Friday, January 13 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Project Presentations | Work on Projects | Work on Projects | Work on Projects | Reporting Day | |
8:30am | Breakfast | Breakfast | Breakfast | Breakfast | |
9:00am-10:30am | Prostate Clinical Discussion with Clare Tempany (to be confirmed) | 9:00am-10:00am: Shape Analysis Breakout ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- 10:00am-12:00pm: Luis Ibanez TensorFlow Workshop (to be confirmed) |
Prostate Cancer: Quantitative Imaging Network Discussion with Fiona Fennessy | Clinical Topics | |
10:30am-12pm: | Talk (Sebastien Ourselin, PhD, UCL) | Project Reporting | |||
12:00pm-1:00pm | Lunch | Lunch | Lunch | Lunch | Lunch boxes; Adjourn by 1:30pm |
1:00-5:30pm | 1:00pm-2:30pm: Project Presentations | 1:30-2:30pm: AMIGO Tour | |||
5:30pm | Adjourn for the day | Adjourn for the day | Adjourn for the day | Adjourn for the day Dinner on Thursday Night (Optional) |
Calendar
The events are listed in the calendar below. Note that due to a current known limitation of our infrastructure, you will need to manually navigate to the week of January 8, 2017 to see the relevant events.
iCal (.ics) link: https://calendar.google.com/calendar/ical/kitware.com_sb07i171olac9aavh46ir495c4%40group.calendar.google.com/public/basic.ics
Projects
- Use this Updated Template for project pages
Learning and GPUs
Web Technologies
- OAuth2.0 authentication in SlicerPathology (Erich Bremer)
Visualization
- Slicer & HoloLens (Adam Rankin)
IGT
- Tracked Ultrasound Standardization III: The Refining (Andras Lasso, Simon Drouin, Junichi Tokuda, Longquan Chen, Adam Rankin, Janne Beate Bakeng)
- WhiteMatterAnalysis New Module and Documentation (Fan Zhang, Isaiah Norton, Ye Wu, Lauren J. O'Donnell)
- ROS Surface Scan (Tobias Frank, Junichi Tokuda, Longquan Chen)
Robotics in IGT
- OpenIGTLink for the Communications of Robotics Devices: Adding Kuka LWR connection to MeVisLab (Scheherazade Kraß (Shery), Junichi Tokuda, Longquan Chen, )
Craniofacial
- Web-based system to federate biological, clinical and morphological data (Juan Carlos Prieto, Clément Mirabel)
Infrastructure
- Slicer Qt5 and Python3 (Steve Pieper, Jean-Christophe Fillion-Robin, Andras Lasso, Andrey Fedorov)
- SlicerDMRI Testing and Documentation (Isaiah Norton, Fan Zhang, Shun Gong, Ye Wu, Lauren J. O'Donnell)
- Subject hierarchy refactoring (Csaba Pinter)
- IPFS and NoSQL for cloud databases (Hans Meine, Steve Pieper)
DICOM
To be Categorized
- Slicer for Hyperspectral Ophthalmology Analysis (Sungmin Hong)
- Slicer for Shape Analysis (Beatriz Paniagua)
- Slicer support for interactive modification of 3D models (Johan Andruejol, Beatriz Paniagua)
- Upgrade Plastimatch extension (Greg Sharp)
- PyRadiomics library (Joost van Griethuysen, Hugo Aerts, Andrey Fedorov, Steve Pieper, Jean-Christope Fillion-Robin)
Registrants
Do not add your name to this list - it is maintained by the organizers based on your paid registration. To register, visit this registration site.
- Peter Anderson :: Retired
- Johan Andruejol :: Kitware, Inc.
- Janne Beate Bakeng :: SINTEF
- Andrew Beers :: Massachusetts General Hospital
- Jorge Luis Bernal Rusiel :: Boston Children's Hospital
- Laurent Chauvin :: ETS
- Alexis Girault :: Kitware, Inc.
- Polina Golland :: Massachusetts Institute of Technology
- Shun Gong :: Brigham and Women's Hospital
- Ron Kikinis :: Brigham and Women's Hospital
- Katie Mastrogiacomo :: Brigham and Women's Hospital
- Beatriz Paniagua :: Kitware, Inc.
- Chintan Parmar :: DFCI-Harvard Medical School
- Steve Pieper :: Isomics, Inc.
- Frank Preiswerk :: Brigham and Women's Hospital
- Patmaa Sridharan :: University of Pennsylvania-CBICA
- Roman Zeleznik :: DFCI
- Miaomiao Zhang :: Massachusetts Institute of Technology
- Tina Kapur :: Brigham and Women's Hospital
- Wu Ye :: Brigham and Women's Hospital
- Erich Bremer :: Stony Brook University
- Sunmin Hong :: New York University
- Hugo Aerts :: DFCI-Harvard
- Ahmed Hosny :: Dana-Farber
- Erik Ziegler :: Open Health Imaging Foundation/Mass General Hospital
- Francois Rheault :: Université de Sherbrooke
- Curtis Lisle :: KnowledgeVis, LLC
- Sonia Pujol :: Brigham and Women's Hospital/Harvard Medical School
- D. Mateus :: TUM
- Michael Chae :: Monash University
- Randy Gollub :: Massachusetts General Hospital
- Jayender Jagadeesan :: Brigham and Women's Hospital
- Mahbubul Alam :: Old Dominion University
- Hans Meine :: University of Bremen
- Csaba Pinter :: Queen's University
- Sheila Cetin Karayumak :: Brigham and Women's Hospital
- Lasitha Vidyaratne :: Old Dominion University
- Isaiah Norton :: Brigham and Women's Hospital
- Christian Herz :: Brigham and Women's Hospital