Advances in Computational Vision and Medical Image Processing Methods and Applications /
The present book contains extended versions of papers presented in the international Conference VIPIMAGE 2007 - ECCOMAS Thematic Conference on Computational Vision and Medical Image, held in Faculdade de Engenharia da Universidade do Porto, in 17-19 of October 2007. This conference was the first ECC...
| Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico | 
|---|---|
| Autor Corporativo: | |
| Otros Autores: | , | 
| Formato: | Electrónico eBook | 
| Idioma: | Inglés | 
| Publicado: | Dordrecht :
        
      Springer Netherlands : Imprint: Springer,    
    
      2009. | 
| Edición: | 1st ed. 2009. | 
| Colección: | Computational Methods in Applied Sciences,
              13 | 
| Temas: | |
| Acceso en línea: | Texto Completo | 
                Tabla de Contenidos: 
            
                  - Modeling Cardiovascular Anatomy from Patient-Specific Imaging
- Geodesic Methods for Shape and Surface Processing
- Robust Shape Estimation with Deformable Models
- Digital Geometry and Its Applications to Medical Imaging
- Multimodality in Brain Imaging: Methodologic Aspects and Applications
- Research Steps Towards Human Sequence Evaluation
- 3D Object Reconstruction from Uncalibrated Images Using an Off-the-Shelf Camera
- Edge-Images Using a Uninorm-Based Fuzzy Mathematical Morphology: Opening and Closing
- A Tissue Relevance and Meshing Method for Computing Patient-Specific Anatomical Models in Endoscopic Sinus Surgery Simulation
- A Robust Eye Tracking Procedure for Medical and Industrial Applications
- 3D Reconstruction of the Retinal Arterial Tree Using Subject-Specific Fundus Images
- Microscale Flow Dynamics of Red Blood Cells in Microchannels: An Experimental and Numerical Analysis
- Efficiency of Spherical Filters on Detection of Isotropic Defects in Textured Backgrounds
- Spontaneous Intracerebral Hemorrhage Image Analysis Methods: A Survey
- Fluid-Structure Interaction Applied to Blood Flow Simulations
- Validity of Paranasal CT Image Reconstruction for Finite Element Models in Otorhinolaryngology.
 


