Difference between revisions of "NA-MIC/Projects/External Collaboration/Mesh Generation Summer 2008"

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  Project Week Results:  [[blah|Jan 2006]], [[blah|Jun 2007]]
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  Project Week Results:  [http://www.na-mic.org/Wiki/index.php/2008_Winter_Project_Week:Meshing_Techniques_into_NA-MIC_Toolkit Winter 2008], [http://www.na-mic.org/Wiki/index.php/Collaboration/Iowa/Meshing/Adding_VTK_Interactive_WWidgets_to_Slicer3 June 2007]

Revision as of 18:56, 5 June 2008

Home < NA-MIC < Projects < External Collaboration < Mesh Generation Summer 2008
Building Block shown with number of mesh seeds color coded.
Mesh quality visualization.



Key Investigators

  • Iowa: Nicole Grosland, Kiran Shivanna, Vincent Magnotta
  • Isomics: Steve Piper
  • Knowledge Vis: Curt Lisle


Objective

We are developing methods generation of finite element meshes. This includes both semi-automated techniques using building blocks that can be manipulated with a number of new VTK widgets, and fully automated mapped meshing techniques. Our group is focused around the application of these tools to study orthopaedic biomechanics, but there are several other potential applications.


Approach, Plan

Work during the project week will continue much of the work that we have undertaken over the past year. Several integration projects will be tackled.

  1. Update existing voxel meshing execution model code. Bring it up to date with the changes that have taken place over the past six months with the base meshing code. Support now exists within Slicer3 for handling of unstructured grids and this should be propagated into this module.
  2. Work with Steve and Curt on changes to the meshing workflow.
  3. Work with Curt on unifying stand-alone and Slicer3 meshing code base.
  4. Discuss with KWWidgets developers some of the issues that exist in this toolkit
    • Multi-column list box scrolling issues
    • Notebook widget and potential for constant size tabs and scrolling tabs

Progress




References

  • Grosland NM, Brown TD. A voxel-based formulation for contact finite element analysis. Comput Methods Biomech Biomed Engin. 5(1):21-32, 2002.
  • Grosland NM, Bafna R, Magnotta VA. Automated Hexahedral Meshing of Anatomical structures using Deformable Registration. Computer Methods in Biomechanics and Biomedical Engineering. Accepted.
  • Grosland NM, Shivanna KH, Magnotta VM, Kallemeyn NA, DeVries NA, Tadepalli SC. IA-FEMesh: An open-source, interactive, multiblock approach to musculoskeletal finite element model development. Submitted.



Description

The Musculoskeletal Imaging, Modeling, and EXperimentation (MIMX) Program is a collaborative effort directed at computational modeling of anatomic structures. A primary objective is to automate the development of patient-/subject- specific models using a combination of imaging and modeling techniques, with particular emphasis on finite element modeling.


Publications

Links


Project Week Results:  Winter 2008, June 2007