63 research outputs found
Valid 3D surface superimposition references to assess facial changes during growth.
Currently, the primary techniques applied for the assessment of facial changes over time utilize 2D images. However, this approach has important limitations related to the dimensional reduction and the accuracy of the used data. 3D facial photography has been recently introduced as a risk-free alternative that overcomes these limitations. However, the proper reference areas that should be used to superimpose serial 3D facial images of growing individuals are not yet known. Here, we tested various 3D facial photo superimposition reference areas and compared their outcomes to those of a standard anterior cranial base superimposition technique. We found that a small rectangular area on the forehead plus an area including the middle part of the nose and the lower wall of the orbital foramen provided comparable results to the standard technique and showed adequate reproducibility. Other reference areas that have been used so far in the literature were less reliable. Within the limitations of the study, a valid superimposition reference area for serial 3D facial images of growing individuals is suggested. The method has potential to greatly expand the possibilities of this highly informative, risk free, and easily obtained 3D tool for the assessment of facial changes in growing individuals
A comparison of the Bravyi-Kitaev and Jordan-Wigner transformations for the quantum simulation of quantum chemistry
The ability to perform classically intractable electronic structure
calculations is often cited as one of the principal applications of quantum
computing. A great deal of theoretical algorithmic development has been
performed in support of this goal. Most techniques require a scheme for mapping
electronic states and operations to states of and operations upon qubits. The
two most commonly used techniques for this are the Jordan-Wigner transformation
and the Bravyi-Kitaev transformation. However, comparisons of these schemes
have previously been limited to individual small molecules. In this paper we
discuss resource implications for the use of the Bravyi-Kitaev mapping scheme,
specifically with regard to the number of quantum gates required for
simulation. We consider both small systems which may be simulatable on
near-future quantum devices, and systems sufficiently large for classical
simulation to be intractable. We use 86 molecular systems to demonstrate that
the use of the Bravyi-Kitaev transformation is typically at least approximately
as efficient as the canonical Jordan-Wigner transformation, and results in
substantially reduced gate count estimates when performing limited circuit
optimisations.Comment: 46 pages, 11 figure
Sized Types for low-level Quantum Metaprogramming
One of the most fundamental aspects of quantum circuit design is the concept
of families of circuits parametrized by an instance size. As in classical
programming, metaprogramming allows the programmer to write entire families of
circuits simultaneously, an ability which is of particular importance in the
context of quantum computing as algorithms frequently use arithmetic over
non-standard word lengths. In this work, we introduce metaQASM, a typed
extension of the openQASM language supporting the metaprogramming of circuit
families. Our language and type system, built around a lightweight
implementation of sized types, supports subtyping over register sizes and is
moreover type-safe. In particular, we prove that our system is strongly
normalizing, and as such any well-typed metaQASM program can be statically
unrolled into a finite circuit.Comment: Presented at Reversible Computation 2019. Final authenticated
publication is available online at
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-21500-2_
Voxel-based superimposition of serial craniofacial cone-beam computed tomographies for facial soft tissue assessment: Reproducibility and segmentation effects.
INTRODUCTION
The aim of this investigation was to evaluate the reproducibility of a voxel-based 3-dimensional superimposition method and the effect of segmentation error on determining soft tissue surface changes.
METHODS
A total of 15 pairs of serial cone-beam computed tomography images (interval: 1.69 ± 0.37 years) from growing subjects (initial age: 11.75 ± 0.59 years) were selected from an existing digital database. Each pair was superimposed on the anterior cranial base, in 3 dimensions with Dolphin 3D software (version 2.1.6079.17633; Dolphin Imaging & Management Solutions, Chatsworth, Calif). The reproducibility of superimposition outcomes and surface segmentation were tested with intra- and interoperator comparisons.
RESULTS
Median differences in inter- and intrarater measurements at various areas presented a range of 0.08-0.21Â mm. In few instances, the differences were larger than 0.5Â mm. In areas where T0-T1 changes were increased, the error did not appear to increase. However, the method error increased the farther the measurement area was from the superimposition reference structure. For individual images, the median soft tissue segmentation error ranged from 0.05 to 0.06 at various areas and in no subject exceeded 0.13Â mm.
CONCLUSIONS
The presented voxel-based superimposition method was efficient and well reproducible. The segmentation process was a minimal source of error; however, there were a few cases in which the total error was more than 0.5Â mm and could be considered clinically significant. Therefore, this method can be used clinically to assess 3-dimensional soft tissue changes during orthodontic treatment in growing patients
A donor-acceptor ensemble: merging of TTF and dipyrrolylquinoxaline difluoroborate chemistry
Tetrathiafulvalene(TTF)-fused donor-acceptor (D–A) ensembles are of high interest due to their unique (opto)electronic properties and potential applications in organic conductors, photovoltaics, sensors, switches and molecular electronics. A direct annulation of a TTF with a variety of electron-acceptors has been achieved for studying photo-induced intramolecular charge transfer (ICT) as well as the photogeneration of long-lived charge separated states in resultant D-A systems. Herein, we describe redox and optical properties of a new D–A ensemble (Chart 1) which was prepared by complexation of BF2 with a TTF-fused 2,3-di(1H-2-pyrrolyl)quinoxaline ligand. A detailed experimental and theoretical study of an ICT process in TTF-QB is presented
Voxel-based superimposition of serial craniofacial CBCTs: Reliability, reproducibility and segmentation effect on hard-tissue outcomes.
OBJECTIVES
To test the reliability and reproducibility of a fast and user-friendly voxel-based 3D superimposition method and the effect of bone segmentation on its outcomes.
SETTING AND SAMPLE POPULATION
This prospective methodological study assessed 15 pairs of pre-existing serial CBCT images (interval: 1.69 ± 0.37 years) obtained from growing patients (initial age: 11.75 ± 0.59 years).
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Volumes were superimposed on the anterior cranial base using Dolphin 3D software. Reliability was assessed visually, by inspecting the overlap of the superimposition reference structures. Reproducibility was tested with intra- and inter-operator comparisons of superimposition outcomes.
RESULTS
The method presented good reliability in all cases. The median differences between intra- and inter-operator comparisons at various tested areas ranged from 0.06 to 0.16 mm and from 0.15 to 0.24 mm, respectively. In few individual cases, differences exceeded 0.5 mm. There was no evidence that the error increased upon increase in the magnitude of the detected T0-T1 changes. However, the superimposition error increased when the distance between the measurement area and the superimposition reference also increased. For a single image, the median error of bone surface segmentation ranged in different areas between 0.05 and 0.12 mm, with few exceptions where it slightly exceeded 0.25 mm.
CONCLUSIONS
The tested voxel-based superimposition method presented good efficiency, cranial base matching and reproducibility in a growing patient sample. Segmentation error was considered minimal. The total error reached clinically relevant levels in very few cases. Thus, this technique is considered appropriate for clinical use, when 3D assessment of craniofacial changes is required
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