3,075 research outputs found
Liver Segmentation and its Application to Hepatic Interventions
The thesis addresses the development of an intuitive and accurate liver segmentation approach, its integration into software prototypes for the planning of liver interventions, and research on liver regeneration. The developed liver segmentation approach is based on a combination of the live wire paradigm and shape-based interpolation. Extended with two correction modes and integrated into a user-friendly workflow, the method has been applied to more than 5000 data sets. The combination of the liver segmentation with image analysis of hepatic vessels and tumors allows for the computation of anatomical and functional remnant liver volumes. In several projects with clinical partners world-wide, the benefit of the computer-assisted planning was shown. New insights about the postoperative liver function and regeneration could be gained, and most recent investigations into the analysis of MRI data provide the option to further improve hepatic intervention planning
Hierarchical Object Parsing from Structured Noisy Point Clouds
Object parsing and segmentation from point clouds are challenging tasks
because the relevant data is available only as thin structures along object
boundaries or other features, and is corrupted by large amounts of noise. To
handle this kind of data, flexible shape models are desired that can accurately
follow the object boundaries. Popular models such as Active Shape and Active
Appearance models lack the necessary flexibility for this task, while recent
approaches such as the Recursive Compositional Models make model
simplifications in order to obtain computational guarantees. This paper
investigates a hierarchical Bayesian model of shape and appearance in a
generative setting. The input data is explained by an object parsing layer,
which is a deformation of a hidden PCA shape model with Gaussian prior. The
paper also introduces a novel efficient inference algorithm that uses informed
data-driven proposals to initialize local searches for the hidden variables.
Applied to the problem of object parsing from structured point clouds such as
edge detection images, the proposed approach obtains state of the art parsing
errors on two standard datasets without using any intensity information.Comment: 13 pages, 16 figure
3D Classification of Power Line Scene Using Airborne Lidar Data
Failure to adequately maintain vegetation within a power line corridor has been identified as a main cause of the August 14, 2003 electric power blackout. Such that, timely and accurate corridor mapping and monitoring are indispensible to mitigate such disaster. Moreover, airborne LiDAR (Light Detection And Ranging) has been recently introduced and widely utilized in industries and academies thanks to its potential to automate the data processing for scene analysis including power line corridor mapping. However, today’s corridor mapping practice using LiDAR in industries still remains an expensive manual process that is not suitable for the large-scale, rapid commercial compilation of corridor maps. Additionally, in academies only few studies have developed algorithms capable of recognizing corridor objects in the power line scene, which are mostly based on 2-dimensional classification. Thus, the objective of this dissertation is to develop a 3-dimensional classification system which is able to automatically identify key objects in the power line corridor from large-scale LiDAR data. This dissertation introduces new features for power structures, especially for the electric pylon, and existing features which are derived through diverse piecewise (i.e., point, line and plane) feature extraction, and then constructs a classification model pool by building individual models according to the piecewise feature sets and diverse voltage training samples using Random Forests. Finally, this dissertation proposes a Multiple Classifier System (MCS) which provides an optimal committee of models from the model pool for classification of new incoming power line scene. The proposed MCS has been tested on a power line corridor where medium voltage transmission lines (115 kV and 230 kV) pass. The classification results based on the MCS applied by optimally selecting the pre-built classification models according to the voltage type of the test corridor demonstrate a good accuracy (89.07%) and computationally effective time cost (approximately 4 hours/km) without additional training fees
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