About

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MICCAI Workshop on Mesh Processing in Medical Image Analysis
In conjunction with MICCAI 2012.
Novotel Hotel, first floor, Rooom Cheret
Nice, France
October 1, 2012

Registration at the Acropolis Convention Center.

Printable workshop flyer.

Scope

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Many strategies for medical image analysis have been built on an image analysis pipeline that starts with acquired image data, performs filtering and processing, constructs geometric models of important surfaces and structures, performs simulation, and finally provides quantitative and visual analysis of the data. Within this pipeline, geometry and shape are commonly represented as a mesh, or a discretization of some domain into simpler computational elements such as quads or triangles (representative of surface pieces) or tetrahedra and hexahedra (representative of volumetric elements). This image-to-mesh (I2M) step converts volumetric images into formats that are more suitable for solving finite-element simulations, analyzing critical structures, and performing boundary surface visualization tasks. Current research in computational geometry, graphics hardware, and computer graphics has produced methods to represent, extract, refine, visualize and analyze both critical surfaces embedded in the 3D volumes, such as interfaces between tissues, as well as volumetric regions, such as organs.

torso The workshop investigates the role meshes have with medical image analysis and is broadly based on three overlapping themes:

  1. Mesh processing,
  2. The I2M pipeline,
  3. Surface analysis and extraction.

While numerous I2M technologies have been developed, rarely do they get sufficient exposure so that out-of-field researchers have the necessary expertise to know the nuances between them. Similarly, researchers in geometry, meshing, and surfacing often consider their problems in independent settings, external to their use in a particular pipeline. In particular, there is a need for designing novel technologies that strictly focus on medical image domains. This workshop proposes to improve the cross-pollination of the imaging and meshing efforts by considering how meshing fits into the end-to-end pipeline from image acquisition to clinical analysis.

Last years workshop MeshMed 2011.

Proceedings

Springer Proceedings was published by Springer within the Lecture Notes in Computer Science (LNCS) series.

Best paper prize

The best paper prize was awarded to Thomas Albrecht for the paper Automatic Fracture Reduction..

Registration

Registration for the workshop is handled trough the main MICCAI conference.

Organisers

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2012 Chairs

Sponsors

The workshop is sponsored by the NIH/NCRR Center for Integrative Biomedical Computing at the Scientific Computing and Imaging Institute, University of Utah and the Department of Mathematical Modeling at the Technical University of Denmark.

Contact

Rasmus R. Paulsen
Associate Professor
Informatics and Mathematical Modelling
Technical University of Denmark
Richard Petersens Plads
Building 321, office 219
DK-2800 Kgs. Lyngby
Denmark
Phone: +45 4525 3423
Fax: +45 4588 1397
http://www.imm.dtu.dk/~rrp
rrp at imm dot dtu dot dk
    Joshua A. Levine
Postdoctoral Research Associate
Scientific Computing and Imaging Institute
University of Utah
72 S Central Campus Drive
WEB 4660
Salt Lake City, UT 84112
USA
Phone: +1-614-404-7462
Fax: +1-801-585-6813
http://www.sci.utah.edu/~jlevine
jlevine at sci dot utah dot edu
Yongjie (Jessica) Zhang
Assistant Professor
Department of Mechanical Engineering
Carnegie Mellon University
303 Scaife Hall
5000 Forbes Avenue
Pittsburgh, PA 15213
USA
Phone: +1-412-268-5332
Fax: +1-412-268-3348
http://www.andrew.cmu.edu/ user/jessicaz/
jessicaz at andrew dot cmu dot edu