2016 Winter Project Week
Dates: January 4-8, 2016
Location: MIT CSAIL, Cambridge, MA. (Rooms: Kiva, R&D)
REGISTRATION: Register here.
Introduction
Founded in 2005, the National Alliance for Medical Image Computing (NAMIC), was 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, built using 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 event called Project Week.
Project Week is a semi-annual event which draws 80-120 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
Agenda
Time | Monday, January 4 | Tuesday, January 5 | Wednesday, January 6 | Thursday, January 7 | Friday, January 8 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Project Presentations | IGT Day | Reporting Day | |||
8:30am | Breakfast | Breakfast | Breakfast | Breakfast | |
9:00am-12:00pm | 10:30am-12pm: [Tutorial] Diffeomorphic registration and geodesic shooting methods (I). (Sarang Joshi) Room: 32-D507. |
10:00-11:30am: Breakout Session: Slicer Extensions Birds of a Feather |
10:00-11:30am: Breakout Session: Slicer for Medical Robotics Research
|
8:30-9:30am TBD 9:30-10:30am Clinical perspective on Image Guided Neurosurgery (Alexandra Golby) |
10:00am-12:00pm: Project Progress Updates Kiva
|
12:00pm-1:00pm | Lunch | Lunch | Lunch | Lunch | Lunch boxes; Adjourn by 1:30pm |
1:00-5:30pm | 1:00pm-1:05pm: Welcome Kiva
4:00-5:30pm: [Tutorial] Diffeomorphic registration geodesic shooting methods (II). (Sarang Joshi) |
1:00-2:30pm: Breakout Session: Diffusion MRI Kiva |
1:00-3:00pm: Breakout Session:What's Planned for Slicer Core |
||
5:30pm | Adjourn for the day | Adjourn for the day | Adjourn for the day | Adjourn for the day |
Calendar
Projects
- Use this Updated Template for project pages
Tractography
- Tractography format interoperability (Isaiah Norton, Michael Onken, Lauren O'Donnell, others)
- Slicer diffusion MR / tractography workflow documentation (Pegah Kahaliardabili, Fan Zhang, Isaiah Norton, Lauren O'Donnell, others)
- Tractography Analysis Module Development and Testing (Fan Zhang, Pegah Kahaliardabili, Isaiah Norton, Lauren O'Donnell, others)
Chest and Lung Image Processing
- Chest Imaging Platform: COPD and other pulmonary diseases (Raúl San José, Jorge Onieva)
- Cluster-Driven Segmentation of Lung Nodules (Vivek Narayan, Raúl San José, Daniel Blezek, Steve Pieper, Chintan Parmar)
Web Presence
- Upgrade the NAMIC (and Slicer?) Wiki (Mike Halle, JC)
General Image Analysis
- Batch Clinical Image Analysis (Kalli Retzepi, Yangming Ou, Matt Toews, Steve Pieper, Sandy Wells, Randy Gollub)
- Image Restoration via Patch GMMs (Adrian Dalca, Katie Bouman, Polina Golland)
- Patch Based Discrete Registration for Difficult Images (Adrian Dalca, Andreea Bobu, Polina Golland)
- Digital Pathology Nuclear Segmentation (Erich Bremer, Nicole Aucoin, Andrey Fedorov)
- Interactive 4D Segmentation Module (Ethan Ulrich)
- Moving beyond SlicerCMF and future projects (Beatriz Paniagua, Lucia Cevidanes, Steve Pieper, Juan Prieto)
- Slicer OpenCV Extension (Nicole Aucoin, Erich Bremer, Andrey Fedorov)
- Low-dimensional Principal Geodesic Analysis On the Manifold of Diffeomorphisms (Miaomiao Zhang, Polina Golland)
Infrastructure
- Common data structure for CMF modules in Slicer (Jean-Baptiste Vimort, François Budin, Lucia Cevidanes, Beatriz Paniagua, Steve Pieper, Juan Prieto)
- Statistical Shape Modeling in Slicer: OA Index (Laura Pascal, Beatriz Paniagua, François Budin, Lucia Cevidanes, Steve Pieper, Juan Prieto)
- CommonGL (Steve Pieper, Jim Miller)
- Running CLI Modules in MeVisLab asynchronously (Hans Meine)
- Interoperability tests with BRAINSFit (or other interesting CLIs) in MeVisLab (Hans Meine, Steve Pieper)
- Kibana dashboard for browsing all available CLI modules (Hans Meine, JC?)
- Editor widget using Segmentations (Csaba Pinter, Andras Lasso, Andrey Fedorov, Steve Pieper?)
- Terminology Editor (Csaba Pinter, Nicole Aucoin, Andrey Fedorov)
- Integration of DICOM segmentation image storage with Segmentations module (Kyle Sunderland, Csaba Pinter, Andras Lasso, Andrey Fedorov, Steve Pieper?)
- Integration of Anaconda Python in Slicer (JC, Raúl San José, Jorge Onieva, Slicer Community?)
- Mechanism to persist clinical user data from different modules based on SQLite and/or other database engines (Raúl San José, Jorge Onieva)
- Workflow module that enables the navigation and data sharing between different modules in a clinical workflow (Raúl San José, Jorge Onieva)
- AIM for interoperability (Hans Meine, Andrey Fedorov, ??)
Logistics
- Dates: January 4-8, 2016
- Location: MIT, Kiva Conference room; 4th floor of Building 32.
- REGISTRATION: Register here. Registration Fee: $300.
- Hotel: Similar to previous years, no rooms have been blocked in a particular hotel.
- Room sharing: If interested, add your name to the list here
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.
- Polina Golland, MIT
- Ron Kikinis, BWH
- Nicole Aucoin, BWH/SPL
- Peter Anderson
- Daniel Blezek, Isomics, Inc.
- Lucia Cevidanes, University of Michigan
- Adrian Dalca, MIT
- Simon Drouin, Montreal Neurological Institute
- Janek Groehl, German Cancer Research Center
- Tina Kapur, BWH/HMS
- Thomas Kirchner, German Cancer Research Center
- Hans Meine, University of Bremen/MEVIS
- Vivek Narayan, Dana Farber Cancer Institute
- Danielle Pace, MIT
- Laura Pascal, University of Michigan
- Steve Pieper, Isomics, Inc.
- Csaba Pinter, Queen's University
- Gregory Sharp, MGH
- James Miller, GE Research
- Kyle Sunderland, Queen's University
- Ethan Ulrich, University of Iowa
- Jean-Baptiste Vimort, University of Michigan
- Miaomiao Zhang, MIT
- Beatrize Paniagua, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
- Sonia Pujol, BWH
- Junichi Tokuda, BWH
- Katie Mastrogiacomo, BWH
- Niravkumar Patel, Worcester Polytechnic Institute
- Michael Onken, Open Connections (Germany)
- Erich Bremer, Stony Brook University
- Xiao Da, MGH
- Tobias Frank, Leibniz Universität Hannover
- Kirby Vosburgh, BWH
- P. Jason White, BWH
- Lauren O'Donnell, BWH
- Pegah Kahali, BWH
- Fan Zhang, BWH
- Adam Rankin, Robarts Research Institute
- Simon Leoard, Johns Hopkins University
- David Gering, HealthMyne
- Johan Andruejol, Kitware
- Jean-Christophe Fillion-Robin, Kitware
- Kelly Xu, MIT
- Christian Askeland, SINTEF
- Katharine Carter, BWH
- Nick Todd, BWH
- Ye Cheng, BWH
- Andriy Fedorov, BWH/HMS
- Sudhanshu Semwal, UCCS Professor