Events from July 6, 2015 – December 16, 2015 – BioMedIA Events from July 6, 2015 – December 16, 2015 – BioMedIA

BioMedIA Talk: Leo Grady (HeartFlow)

Huxley 144

Personalized Blood Flow Simulation from an Image-Derived Model: Changing the Paradigm for Cardiovascular Diagnostics Abstract: Coronary heart disease is the leading cause of mortality worldwide, accounting for 1/3 of all … Continued

BioMedIA Talk: Archontis Giannakidis (Royal Brompton)

Huxley 144

Improving clinical application of cardiac diffusion tensor MRI Abstract  Magnetic resonance diffusion tensor imaging (MRDTI), also known as DTI, has emerged as a powerful non-invasive tool for mapping the orientation-dependent microanatomical … Continued

BioMedIA Talk: Enrico Grisan (University of Padova)

Huxley 217/218

Segmenting 2D+T ultrasound imaging data in fetus: improving the estimation of biomarkers of risky adaptations Abstract: Approximately 10% of the pregnancies are complicated by growth restriction and 7% of pregnancies … Continued

BACON: Workshop on Brain Analysis using Connectivity Networks

MICCAI'16 InterContinental Athenaeum Athens Syngrou Avenue 89-93, Athens 117 45, Greece

Understanding brain connectivity in a network-theoretic context has shown much promise in recent years. This type of analysis identifies brain organisational principles, bringing a new perspective to neuroscience. At the … Continued

RAMBO: Workshop on Reconstruction and Analysis of Moving Body Organs

MICCAI'16 InterContinental Athenaeum Athens Syngrou Avenue 89-93, Athens 117 45, Greece

This year we are co-organising the Workshop on Brain Analysis using Connectivity Networks at MICCAI’16 in Athens in the morning of Monday 17/10/2016.  Please consider to submit your work until … Continued

BioMedIA Talk: Raphael Sznitman (University of Bern, Switzerland)

Huxley 341 Room 341, Huxley Building, Department of Computing, Imperial College London, 180 Queen's Gate, London, London, United Kingdom

Finding the needle in the haystack: detection, tracking and registration in biomedical imaging   Abstract From centimeter-sized observations visible in endoscopy to nanometer large intra-cellular structures discernible with Electron Microscopes, … Continued