1,961 research outputs found

    Precise localization for aerial inspection using augmented reality markers

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    The final publication is available at link.springer.comThis chapter is devoted to explaining a method for precise localization using augmented reality markers. This method can achieve precision of less of 5 mm in position at a distance of 0.7 m, using a visual mark of 17 mm × 17 mm, and it can be used by controller when the aerial robot is doing a manipulation task. The localization method is based on optimizing the alignment of deformable contours from textureless images working from the raw vertexes of the observed contour. The algorithm optimizes the alignment of the XOR area computed by means of computer graphics clipping techniques. The method can run at 25 frames per second.Peer ReviewedPostprint (author's final draft

    Head Tracking via Robust Registration in Texture Map Images

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    A novel method for 3D head tracking in the presence of large head rotations and facial expression changes is described. Tracking is formulated in terms of color image registration in the texture map of a 3D surface model. Model appearance is recursively updated via image mosaicking in the texture map as the head orientation varies. The resulting dynamic texture map provides a stabilized view of the face that can be used as input to many existing 2D techniques for face recognition, facial expressions analysis, lip reading, and eye tracking. Parameters are estimated via a robust minimization procedure; this provides robustness to occlusions, wrinkles, shadows, and specular highlights. The system was tested on a variety of sequences taken with low quality, uncalibrated video cameras. Experimental results are reported

    Storytelling with salient stills

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    Thesis (M.S.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Program in Media Arts & Sciences, 1996.Includes bibliographical references (p. 59-63).Michale J. Massey.M.S

    Feature-Based Correspondences to Infer the Location of Anatomical Landmarks

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    A methodology has been developed for automatically determining inter-image correspondences between cliques of features extracted from a reference and a query image. Cliques consist of up to threefeatures and correspondences between them are determined via a hierarchy of similarity metrics based on the inherent properties of the features and geometric relationships between those features. As opposed to approaches that determine correspondences solely by voxel intensity, features that also include shape description are used. Specifically, medial-based features areemployed because they are sparse compared to the number of image voxels and can be automatically extracted from the image.The correspondence framework has been extended to automatically estimate the location of anatomical landmarks in the query image by adding landmarks to the cliques. Anatomical landmark locationsare then inferred from the reference image by maximizing landmark correspondences. The ability to infer landmark locations has provided a means to validate the correspondence framework in thepresence of structural variation between images. Moreover, automated landmark estimation imparts the user with anatomical information and can hypothetically be used to initialize andconstrain the search space of segmentation and registration methods.Methods developed in this dissertation were applied to simulated MRI brain images, synthetic images, and images constructed from several variations of a parametric model. Results indicate that the methods are invariant to global translation and rotation and can operate in the presence of structure variation between images.The automated landmark placement method was shown to be accurate as compared to ground-truth that was established both parametrically and manually. It is envisioned that these automated methods could prove useful for alleviating time-consuming and tedious tasks in applications that currently require manual input, and eliminate intra-user subjectivity

    Preoperative Systems for Computer Aided Diagnosis based on Image Registration: Applications to Breast Cancer and Atherosclerosis

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    Computer Aided Diagnosis (CAD) systems assist clinicians including radiologists and cardiologists to detect abnormalities and highlight conspicuous possible disease. Implementing a pre-operative CAD system contains a framework that accepts related technical as well as clinical parameters as input by analyzing the predefined method and demonstrates the prospective output. In this work we developed the Computer Aided Diagnostic System for biomedical imaging analysis of two applications on Breast Cancer and Atherosclerosis. The aim of the first CAD application is to optimize the registration strategy specifically for Breast Dynamic Infrared Imaging and to make it user-independent. Base on the fact that automated motion reduction in dynamic infrared imaging is on demand in clinical applications, since movement disarranges time-temperature series of each pixel, thus originating thermal artifacts that might bias the clinical decision. All previously proposed registration methods are feature based algorithms requiring manual intervention. We implemented and evaluated 3 different 3D time-series registration methods: 1. Linear affine, 2. Non-linear Bspline, 3. Demons applied to 12 datasets of healthy breast thermal images. The results are evaluated through normalized mutual information with average values of 0.70±0.03, 0.74±0.03 and 0.81±0.09 (out of 1) for Affine, BSpline and Demons registration, respectively, as well as breast boundary overlap and Jacobian determinant of the deformation field. The statistical analysis of the results showed that symmetric diffeomorphic Demons registration method outperforms also with the best breast alignment and non-negative Jacobian values which guarantee image similarity and anatomical consistency of the transformation, due to homologous forces enforcing the pixel geometric disparities to be shortened on all the frames. We propose Demons registration as an effective technique for time-series dynamic infrared registration, to stabilize the local temperature oscillation. The aim of the second implemented CAD application is to assess contribution of calcification in plaque vulnerability and wall rupture and to find its maximum resistance before break in image-based models of carotid artery stenting. The role of calcification inside fibroatheroma during carotid artery stenting operation is controversial in which cardiologists face two major problems during the placement: (i) “plaque protrusion” (i.e. elastic fibrous caps containing early calcifications that penetrate inside the stent); (ii) “plaque vulnerability” (i.e. stiff plaques with advanced calcifications that break the arterial wall or stent). Finite Element Analysis was used to simulate the balloon and stent expansion as a preoperative patient-specific virtual framework. A nonlinear static structural analysis was performed on 20 patients acquired using in vivo MDCT angiography. The Agatston Calcium score was obtained for each patient and subject-specific local Elastic Modulus (EM) was calculated. The in silico results showed that by imposing average ultimate external load of 1.1MPa and 2.3MPa on balloon and stent respectively, average ultimate stress of 55.7±41.2kPa and 171±41.2kPa are obtained on calcifications. The study reveals that a significant positive correlation (R=0.85, p<0.0001) exists on stent expansion between EM of calcification and ultimate stress as well as Plaque Wall Stress (PWS) (R=0.92, p<0.0001), comparing to Ca score that showed insignificant associations with ultimate stress (R=0.44, p=0.057) and PWS (R=0.38, p=0.103), suggesting minor impact of Ca score in plaque rupture. These average data are in good agreement with results obtained by other research groups and we believe this approach enriches the arsenal of tools available for pre-operative prediction of carotid artery stenting procedure in the presence of calcified plaques
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