TubeTK: Difference between revisions
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* [[TubeTK/Sliding_Organ_Registration | Sliding organ registration]] are methods for registering images of multiple organs in which the organs may have shifted, expanded, or compressed independently. | * [[TubeTK/Sliding_Organ_Registration | Sliding organ registration]] are methods for registering images of multiple organs in which the organs may have shifted, expanded, or compressed independently. | ||
* [[TubeTK/Intra-operative_Ultrasound_Registration | Intra-operative ultrasound registration]] is the grand challenge of real-time transcription of pre-operative surgical plans into intra-operative ultrasound images. | * [[TubeTK/Intra-operative_Ultrasound_Registration | Intra-operative ultrasound registration]] is the grand challenge of real-time transcription of pre-operative surgical plans into intra-operative ultrasound images. | ||
== Acknowledgement == | |||
If you find TubeTK useful for your work and publications, please include a reference to this website and to | |||
S. R. Aylward and E. Bullitt, “Initialization, noise, singularities, and scale in height ridge traversal for tubular object centerline extraction,” Medical Imaging, IEEE Transactions on, vol. 21, no. 2, pp. 61–75, 2002. | |||
Thank you! | |||
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Revision as of 14:52, 19 November 2012
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OverviewTubeTK is being developed to host algorithms for applications involving images of tubes (blood vessel in medical images, roads in satellite images, etc.). It also offers methods for handling other geometries (points, surfaces, and densities) in images. By focusing on local geometric structure, the algorithms are able to accomplish segmentations, registrations, and other analyses that consider the physicial properties of objects and their variations, while not requiring limiting assumptions on the specific arrangement or general shape of the objects in the images. We are applying these techniques to push image understanding in new directions such as:
At this time TubeTK is targeted for
We are working to provide modules, based on TubeTK, that allow TubeTK's methods to be called from within Slicer, Osirix, and ImageJ. If you have questions regarding or suggestions for improving TubeTK, please do not hesitate to contact the development team. Features
Driving Applications
Technical Focus
AcknowledgementIf you find TubeTK useful for your work and publications, please include a reference to this website and to S. R. Aylward and E. Bullitt, “Initialization, noise, singularities, and scale in height ridge traversal for tubular object centerline extraction,” Medical Imaging, IEEE Transactions on, vol. 21, no. 2, pp. 61–75, 2002. Thank you! |