437 research outputs found

    British Party Election Broadcasts (2001, 2005 and 2010): Ideological Framing, Storytelling, Individualisation

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    As the majority of programmes aired on British terrestrial channels, Party Election Broadcasts (PEBs) address a large and anonymous audience. In order to reach specific viewers however, they rest on stereotyped representational codes meant to enable target voters to identify with the characters and the situations portrayed. The mirror presented to them is necessarily distorted to fit within the party’s ideological framework and to serve its electoral ambition. This article examines the representational codes at work in the PEBs produced by the three main British political parties at the general elections of 2001, 2005 and 2010. How are those codes manipulated to produce a dynamic (audio-visual) discourse? How is dramatisation used to engage the audience and enhance message recall? How do PEBs reflect the personification of issues and the individualisation of the social body

    British Party Election Broadcasts (2001, 2005 and 2010): Ideological Framing, Storytelling, Individualisation

    Get PDF
    As the majority of programmes aired on British terrestrial channels, Party Election Broadcasts (PEBs) address a large and anonymous audience. In order to reach specific viewers however, they rest on stereotyped representational codes meant to enable target voters to identify with the characters and the situations portrayed. The mirror presented to them is necessarily distorted to fit within the party’s ideological framework and to serve its electoral ambition. This article examines the representational codes at work in the PEBs produced by the three main British political parties at the general elections of 2001, 2005 and 2010. How are those codes manipulated to produce a dynamic (audio-visual) discourse? How is dramatisation used to engage the audience and enhance message recall? How do PEBs reflect the personification of issues and the individualisation of the social body

    Construction of a complete set of orthogonal Fourier-Mellin moment invariants for pattern recognition applications

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    International audienceThe completeness property of a set of invariant descriptors is of fundamental importance from the theoretical as well as the practical points of view. In this paper, we propose a general approach to construct a complete set of orthogonal Fourier-Mellin moment (OFMM) invariants. By establishing a relationship between the OFMMs of the original image and those of the image having the same shape but distinct orientation and scale, a complete set of scale and rotation invariants is derived. The efficiency and the robustness to noise of the method for recognition tasks are shown by comparing it with some existing methods on several data sets

    eXiTCDSS: A framework for a workflow-based CBR for interventional Clinical Decision Support Systems and its application to TAVI

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    This work has been financed by the Spanish Government Commission Ministerio de Industria, Turismo y Comercio (MITyC) under the project PLAN AVANZA 2 labeled by Information Technology for European Advancement 2 (ITEA2). Also, this research project has been partially funded through the project labeled DPI2011-24929.International audienceClinical Decision Support System (CDSSs) should form an important part of the field of clinical knowledge management technologies through their capacity to support the clinical process and use of knowledge, including knowledge maintenance and continuous learning, from diagnosis and investigation through surgery, treatment and long-term care. The work presented shows a workflow-based CDSS designed to give case-specific assessment to clinicians during complex surgery or Minimally Invasive Surgery (MISs). Following a perioperative workflow, the designed software will use a Case-Based Reasoning (CBR) methodology to retrieve similar past cases from a case base to provide support at any particular point of the process. The graphical user interface allows easy navigation through the whole support progress, from the initial configuration steps to the final results organized as sets of experiments easily visualized in a user-friendly way. The eXiTCDSS tool is presented giving support to a recent complex minimally invasive surgery which is receiving growing attention lately, the Transcatheter Aortic Valve Implantation (TAVI). The results obtained are presented on a basis of a real TAVI case base of 82 patients operated at Rennes University Hospital

    Traitement et exploration d'images TDM pour l'évaluation des bioprothèses valvulaires aortiques

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    Le but de cette étude est d évaluer la faisabilité de l analyse tomodensitométrique 3D des bioprothèses aortiques pour faciliter leur évaluation morphologique durant le suivi et d aider la sélection de cas et améliorer la planification d une procédure valvein-valve. Le challenge était représenté par le rehaussement des feuillets valvulaires, en raison d images très bruitées. Un angio-scanner synchronisé était réalisé chez des patients porteurs d une bioprotèses aortique dégénérée avant réintervention (images in-vivo). Différentes méthodes pour la réduction du bruit étaient proposées. La reconstruction tridimensionnelle des bioprothèses était réalisée en utilisant des méthodes de segmentation de régions par "sticks". Après réopération ces méthodes étaient appliquées aux images scanner des bioprothèses explantées (images ex-vivo) et utilisées comme référence. La réduction du bruit obtenue par le filtre stick modifié montrait meilleurs résultats en rapport signal/bruit en comparaison aux filtres de diffusion anisotropique. Toutes les méthodes de segmentation ont permis une reconstruction 3D des feuillets. L analyse qualitative a montré une bonne concordance entre les images obtenues in-vivo et les altérations des bioprothèses. Les résultats des différentes méthodes étaient comparés par critères volumétriques et discutés. Les bases d'une première approche de visualisation spatio-temporelle d'images TDM 3D+T de la prothèse valvulaire ont été proposés. Elle implique des techniques de rendu volumique et de compensation de mouvement. Son application à la valve native a aussi été envisagée. Les images scanner des bioprothèses aortiques nécessitent un traitement de débruitage et de réduction des artéfacts de façon à permettre le rehaussement des feuillets prothétiques. Les méthodes basées sticks semblent constituer une approche pertinente pour caractériser morphologiquement la dégénérescence des bioprothèses.The aim of the study was to assess the feasibility of CT based 3D analysis of degenerated aortic bioprostheses to make easier their morphological assessment. This could be helpful during regular follow-up and for case selection, improved planning and mapping of valve-in-valve procedure. The challenge was represented by leaflets enhancement because of highly noised CT images. Contrast-enhanced ECG-gated CT scan was performed in patients with degenerated aortic bioprostheses before reoperation (in-vivo images). Different methods for noise reduction were tested and proposed. 3D reconstruction of bioprostheses components was achieved using stick based region segmentation methods. After reoperation, segmentation methods were applied to CT images of the explanted prostheses (exvivo images). Noise reduction obtained by improved stick filter showed best results in terms of signal to noise ratio comparing to anisotropic diffusion filters. All segmentation methods applied to the best phase of in-vivo images allowed 3D bioprosthetic leaflets reconstruction. Explanted bioprostheses CT images were also processed and used as reference. Qualitative analysis revealed a good concordance between the in-vivo images and the bioprostheses alterations. Results from different methods were compared by means of volumetric criteria and discussed. A first approach for spatiotemporal visualization of 3D+T images of valve bioprosthesis has been proposed. Volume rendering and motion compensation techniques were applied to visualize different phases of CT data. Native valve was also considered. ECG-gated CT images of aortic bioprostheses need a preprocessing to reduce noise and artifacts in order to enhance prosthetic leaflets. Stick based methods seems to provide an interesting approach for the morphological characterization of degenerated bioprostheses.RENNES1-Bibl. électronique (352382106) / SudocSudocFranceF

    Coronary vein tracking from MSCT using a minimum cost path approach

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    International audienceIn this paper, we deal with the problem of tracking the coronary venous tree from Multi-Slice Computed Tomography (MSCT) angiography. Contrast inhomogeneities are a major issue. The proposed tracking procedure is based on minimum-cost path computation and makes use of `Fast-Marching' technique. The algorithm aims at propagating a front inside a vascular structure and extracting a centered path. To achieve this goal, a specific cost function which combines the vessel local orientation to a vesselness measure is designed. Experiments on synthetic data and real data have been performed. Coronary veins with contrast difficulties are extracted with a low computing time

    Review of patient-specific simulations of transcatheter aortic valve implantation

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    International audienceTranscatheter Aortic Valve Implantation (TAVI) accounts for one of the most promising new cardiovascular procedures. This minimally invasive technique is still at its early stage and is constantly developing thanks to imaging techniques, computer science, biomechanics and technologies of prosthesis and delivery tools. As a result, patient-specific simulation can find an exciting playground in TAVI. It canexpress its potential by providing the clinicians with powerful decision support, offering great assistance in their workflow. Through a review of the current scientific field, we try to identify the challenges and future evolutions of patient-specific simulation for TAVI. This review article is an attempt to summarize and coordinate data scattered across the literature about patient-specific biomechanical simulation for TAVI

    Application de la navigation active à la caractérisation automatique de structures anatomiques

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    Les volumes tridimensionnels obtenus par scanner hélicoïdal ou IRM permettent de se déplacer virtuellement à l'intérieur de structures anatomiques et de les observer. Nous proposons une nouvelle méthode pour guider la planification de trajectoires grâce à l'interprétation locale des images pendant la navigation à l'intérieur des cavités d'une structure anatomique et ce sans prétraitement sur le volume initial. Le capteur virtuel construit un modèle de la scène inconnue grâce à l'analyse de l'image. Cette exploration autorise la caractérisation quantitative et qualitative de la structure anatomique ce qui est fondamental dans cette nouvelle application de l'endoscopie virtuelle qui concerne la chirurgie vasculaire. Nous reportons en particulier les résultats obtenus sur des images volumiques de fantômes et de patients acquises par scanner hélicoïdal en conditions cliniques

    Analyse de cartes de profondeur pour la navigation active dans un volume image

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    Nous proposons une méthode de navigation automatique d'un endoscope virtuel à l'intérieur d'un volume image. Cette navigation est basée sur la vision, la décision de déplacement repose sur une perception locale des configurations spatiales sans traitement préalable (segmentation, modélisation) du volume. En effet nous privilégions ici une analyse de l'image -obtenue par lancer de rayons- à partir de sa carte de profondeur. De ce traitement nous obtenons la détection automatique des branchements et une information structurelle sur la scène observée

    Quantification of the volumetric benefit of image-guided radiotherapy (IGRT) in prostate cancer: margins and presence probability map

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    International audiencePURPOSE: To quantify the prostate and seminal vesicles (SV) anatomic variations in order to choose appropriate margins including intrapelvic anatomic variations. To quantify volumetric benefit of image-guided radiotherapy (IGRT). PATIENTS AND METHODS: Twenty patients, receiving a total dose of 70 Gy in the prostate, had a planning CT scan and eight weekly CT scans during treatment. Prostate and SV were manually contoured. Each weekly CT scan was registered to the planning CT scan according to three modalities: radiopaque skin marks, pelvis bone or prostate. For each patient, prostate and SV displacements were quantified. 3D maps of prostate and SV presence probability were established. Volumes including minimal presence probabilities were compared between the three modalities of registration. RESULTS: For the prostate intrapelvic displacements, systematic and random variations and maximal displacements for the entire population were: 5mm, 2.7 mm and 16.5mm in anteroposterior axis; 2.7 mm, 2.4mm and 11.4mm in superoinferior axis and 0.5mm, 0.8mm and 3.3mm laterally. Margins according to van Herk recipe (to cover the prostate for 90% of the patients with the 95% isodose) were: 8mm, 8.3mm and 1.9 mm, respectively. The 100% prostate presence probability volumes correspond to 37%, 50% and 61% according to the registration modality. For the SV, these volumes correspond to 8%, 14% and 18% of the SV volume. CONCLUSIONS: Without IGRT, 5mm prostate posterior margins are insufficient and should be at least 8mm, to account for intrapelvic anatomic variations. Prostate registration almost doubles the 100% presence probability volume compared to skin registration. Deformation of SV will require either to increase dramatically margins (simple) or new planning (not realistic)
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