A 3-D View of the Brain 68
Jamie found a nifty story about Researchers at Thomas Jefferson University Hospital coming up with new 3D Brain Imaging Software. The interesting bit is that it merges data from MRIs as well as various other types of brain scans to create a single visualization for your noodle.
Check out the 'MultiMedia' (Score:5, Informative)
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Oblig.. (Score:2)
That will be $213,134.56, please. (Score:2, Funny)
Matching images. (Score:1)
FTFA:...including conventional magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), functional MRI (fMRI), and diffusion-tensor imaging (DTI).
They're all forms of MRI. Unless there's a MRI machine that can do it all, it would seem to me that you would have to have the patient go from one machine to another. I'm curious how they match up the structures exactly from one scan to an
Re:Matching images. (Score:4, Informative)
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they're relatively easy to match up!
Not always true. A GRE, SE, or FLAIR image sequence for anatomy will not line up well with the EPI sequence of fMRI due to B field non-linearities and shift even if the patient doesn't move. The nice thing, though, is that unless there is surgery and deformation due to swelling, tissue void, or skull shifting, the skull shape stays constant and one can use it as a rigid body for starting the registration.
There are some software programs to attempt it but it still comes
Re:Matching images. (Score:4, Informative)
You've obviously never spent an hour inside one of those machines. I used to do research in an fMRI lab and even something like post nasal drip eventually makes you swallow just to keep breathing and the slight movement pushes your head into a new pixel lattice so when you subtract the images you just see gray everywhere.
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Or are you suggesting that your brain actually moves around inside your skull when you swallow..?
The brain really moves the B field during swallowing, resulting the the brain apparently moving.
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- Nothing shows up on an fMRI (it seems a few neurons fire somewhere and you're in excruciating pa
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The machine takes many 2-d image slices, and a program aligns them into a 3-d model.
We all know what a man's brain really looks like- (Score:5, Funny)
http://www.suddenlysenior.com/Images/malebrainwome n.gif [suddenlysenior.com]
Re:We all know what a man's brain really looks lik (Score:1)
The ultimate geek (Score:2, Interesting)
I'm such a dork, because I kinda want one too.
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No, he`s not the only one.
I would love to have a picture of my brain.
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The alternative is to get to have it prescribed by a Neurologist, and then your medical insurance should pay for it. At least, that worked for me.
In my case, I am actually able to say the following:
<ahnold>It's not a too-mah. Wait. It IS a too-mah!<\ahnold>
(yes, I did in fact have a brain tumour)
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http://www.imperial.ac.uk/p5374 [imperial.ac.uk]
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Not likely (Score:4, Funny)
for the lazy (Score:2, Informative)
nothing new (Score:5, Interesting)
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Nothing new here... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Nothing new here... (Score:5, Informative)
How about over THREE Decades. As a high school student (in the 70's), I worked on software to merge CAT scans and thermal scans of the brain during an NSF summer program at Mizzou. Fortran IV, big honkin IBM 360 mainframe, etc. The first run with a full data load took the entire University mainframe down (hey, I was only 15 and didn't understand JCL, shoot me). We were trying to auto-diagnose tumors.
The basic engineering has been refined, but the science is still the same.
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http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2007/07/07073 0173404.htm [sciencedaily.com]
http://www.cs.sunysb.edu/~vislab/papers/Xin_ISMRM. pdf [sunysb.edu] - paper from Thomas Jefferson University and Stony Brook University
Other posters here note the concept is not unique; but perhaps using it for surgical procedures regularly, rather than pure research, migh
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PET/CT scanners can produce coherent datasets that can be fused by a simple overlay, and software like Mirada 7D Fusion (which we [vitalimages.com] integrate with) can fully deformably fuse all sorts of datasets from differing modalities. This is usually a 2D overlay, and it looks different than what this software is doing. They are claiming that specifically fibrous tumor growth can be visualized in new ways. So perhaps the fusing isn't novel, but the method of fusing and/or vis
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In other words, the brain in its entirety, as a compilation of traits, would not be random, but each and every individual function would be. I believe that the point that the parent poster was trying to mak
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I can't say I understand what you mean when you say that a system as complex as the immune system (what with all the differentiated cells, specific antibodies, cytokines directing cells, the compliment system, the antigen recognition and memorization of the adaptive immune response, ect.,
"noodle" (Score:3, Funny)
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House (Score:2, Funny)
Not really a new thing (Score:1)
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> this is not really a new thing. Image Fusion [wikipedia.org] has been around for a while now
> but it has not yet become a mainstream technique.
It is very mainstream for PET/CT fusion. Many manufacturers make combo PET/CT machines for just this purpose since the acquisitions are done at the same time, they align very closely and little if any rotation/translation has to be done for a good volume match.
New Dizzy Dean quote (Score:2)
Getting close (Score:2)
The Mind Uploading home page is dedicated to the putative future process of copying one's mind from the natural substrate of the brain into an artificial one, manufactured by humans. This technology will radically alter society in many ways, as science fiction authors have begun to illustrate. Through this server, explore the science behind the science fiction!
-- Dissy
10 years ago (Score:4, Insightful)
It was. I actually wrote my master thesis about it exactly 10 years ago. But one thing is the technology. Another thing is someone to fund the development of a fully functional package. Technology is many years ahead of reality when it comes to medical imaging.
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This is your brain (Score:1)
My Brain (Score:2)
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Ok, I'm just kidding. It looks perfectly normal. (I wasn't kidding about dealing with MRIs on a daily basis though). Nice images; thanks for the links.
Getting your data (Score:2)
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After many episodes of Really Bad Headaches, I finally had a scan prescribed. I noticed that the tech and assistants seemed to look at me quite a bit differently after the scan. It turned out that I in fact had a tumour and a very large cyst which would have been immediately obvious to anyone, no medical training required. In retrospect, they were probably thinking "you shouldn't be walking around with that thing in your head!" about
not news (Score:1)
Old News (Score:1)
http://www.sgi.com/products/software/volumizer/ [sgi.com]
The Original Project (Score:1)
FYI,one way to compute 3d brain models from MRIs.. (Score:2, Interesting)