symposium on imaging: to2010ieeeinternational symposium onbiomedical imaging:fromnanoto macro...
TRANSCRIPT
2010 IEEE International
Symposium on Biomedical
Imaging: From Nano to Macro
(ISBI2010)
Rotterdam, Netherlands
14-17 April 2010
Pages 1-699 [_ A~]
IPCC IEEE Catalog Number: CFP10BIS-PRTItEt ISBN: 978-1-4244-4125-9
1/2
Table of Contents
Volume
WE-PSl: VASCULAR IMAGE ANALYSIS
WE-PS1.1: ULTRASONOGRAPHIC PLAQUE CHARACTERIZATION USING A RAYLEIGH 1
MIXTURE MODEL
Jose Seabra, Joao Sanches, Institute) Superior Tecnico, Portugal; Francesco Ciompi, Petia Radeva, Universitat
de Barcelona, Spain
WE-PS1.2: IMPROVING HARD EXUDATE DETECTION IN RETINAL IMAGES 5
THROUGH A COMBINATION OF LOCAL AND CONTEXTUAL INFORMATION
Clara I. Sanchez, Meindert Niemeijer, Image Sciences Institute, University Medical Center Utrecht,
Netherlands; Maria S. A. Suttorp Schulten, Ophthalmology Service, Netherlands; Michael Abramoff,
Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences, United States; Bram van Ginneken, Image Sciences Institute, UniversityMedical Center Utrecht, Netherlands
WE-PS1.3: A PATIENT-SPECIFIC CORONARY DENSITY ESTIMATE 9
Rahil Shahzad, Delft University of Technology, Netherlands; Michiel Schaap, Theo van Walsum, Stefan Klien,
Annick Weustink, Erasmus MC - University Medical Center Rotterdam, Netherlands; Lucas van Vliet, DelftUniversity of Technology, Netherlands; Wiro Niessen, Erasmus MC - University Medical Center Rotterdam,Netherlands
WE-PS1.4: AUTOMATED CAROTID ARTERY DISTENSIBILITY MEASUREMENTS 13
FROM CTA USING NONRIGID REGISTRATION
Reinhard Hameeteman, Biomedical Imaging Group Rotterdam, Departments ofRadiology & Medical
Informatics Erasmus MC, Netherlands; Sietske Rozie, Coert Metz, Stefan Klein, Theo Walsum, van, Aad Lugt,
van der, Erasmus MC - University Medical Center Rotterdam, Netherlands; Wiro Niessen, Biomedical Imaging
Group Rotterdam, Departments ofRadiology & Medical Informatics Erasmus MC, Netherlands
WE-PS1.5: CORONARY VEIN TRACKING FROM MSCT USING A MINIMUM COST 17
PATH APPROACH
Marie-Paule Garcia, Christine Toumoulin, Pascal Haigron, Jerome Velut, Mireille Garreau, Universite de
Rennes I, France; Dominique Boulmier, CHU Rennes, France
WE-PS1.6: EVALUATING DEFORMATION PATTERNS OF THE AORTA IN CTA 21
SEQUENCESErnst Schwartz, Roman Gottardi, Johannes Holfeld, Christian Loewe, Martin Czerny, Medical University
Vienna, Austria; Georg Langs, Massachusetts Institute ofTechnology, United States
WE-PS1.7: SERIAL NONRIGID VASCULAR REGISTRATION USING WEIGHTED 25
NORMALIZED MUTUAL INFORMATION
Jung W. Suh, Dustin Scheinost, Yale University, United States; Xiaoning Qian, University ofSouth Florida,United States; Albert Sinusas, Christopher Breuer, Xenophon Papademetris, Yale University, United States
ix
WE-PS1.8: MULTI-SCALE APPROACH FOR RETINAL VESSEL SEGMENTATION 29
USING MEDIALNESS FUNCTION
Elahe Moghimirad, Seyed Hamid Rezatofighi, Hamid Soltanian-Zadeh, University of Tehran, Iran
WE-PS1.9: INFLUENCE OF VESSEL ROUGHNESS ON WALL SHEAR STRESS IN 33
IMAGE-BASED BLOOD FLOW MODELING
Guanglei Xiong, Charles Taylor, Stanford University, United States
WE-PS1.10: 3D CORONARY STRUCTURE TRACKING ALGORITHM WITH 37
REGULARIZATION AND MULTIPLE HYPOTHESES IN MRI
Jerome Velut, Christine Toumoulin, Jean-Louis Coatrieux, LTSI - INSERM U642, France
WE-PS1.11: ADAPTIVE INTENSITYMODELS FOR PROBABILISTIC TRACKING OF 3D 41
VASCULATURE
Fei Zhao, Rahul Bhotika, Paulo Mendonca, Nils Krahnstoever, James V. Miller, GE Global Research, United
States
WE-PS1.12: AUTOMATIC GLOBAL VESSEL SEGMENTATION AND CATHETER 45
REMOVAL USING LOCAL GEOMETRY INFORMATION AND VECTOR FIELD
INTEGRATION
Matthias Schneider, Friedrich-Alexander University, Germany; Hari Sundar, Siemens Corporate Research,United States
WE-PS1.13: FRACTAL MODELLING AND ANALYSIS OF FLOW-FIELD IMAGES 49
Pouya Tafti, Ricard Delgado-Gonzalo, Ecole Polytechnique Federate de Lausanne (EPFL), Switzerland;Aurelien Stalder, University Hospital Freiburg, Germany; Michael Unser, Ecole Polytechnique Federale de
Lausanne (EPFL), Switzerland
WE-PS1.14: A DYNAMIC RECONSTRUCTION APPROACH FOR CEREBRAL BLOOD 53
FLOW QUANTIFICATION WITH AN INTERVENTIONAL C-ARM CTAndreas Fieselmann, University Erlangen-Nuremberg, Germany; Arundhuti Ganguly, Stanford University,United States; Yu Deuerling-Zheng, Michael Zellerhojf, Jan Boese, Siemens AG, Germany; Joachim
Hornegger, University Erlangen-Nuremberg, Germany; Rebecca Fahrig, Stanford University, United States
WE-PS2: BRAIN IMAGING AND ANALYSIS I
WE-PS2.1: ROBUSTNESS AND SENSITIVITY OF HOTELLING'S T2-BASED 57
PERMUTATION TESTS FORSELECTION OF 3D MORPHOLOGICAL MARKERSLuca Ferrarini, Leiden University Medical Center, Netherlands; Giovanni B. Frisoni, Michela Pievani,Rossana Ganzola, IRCCS San Giovanni di Dio-FBF, Italy; Johan H.C. Reiber, Julien Milles, Leiden UniversityMedical Center, Netherlands
WE-PS2.2: MULTI-CONTRAST DEEPNUCLEI SEGMENTATION USING A 61PROBABILISTICATLASLinda Marrakchi-Kacem, Cyril Poupon, Jean-Franqois Mangin, Fabrice Poupon, CEA, France
WE-PS2.3: WHICH BRAINSTEM CELLS GENERATE THE RESPIRATION CYCLES? 65Allison W. Irvine, Florida International University, United States; Sotirios Chatzis, Gavriil Tsechpenakis,University ofMiami, United States
x
WE-PS2.4: ADAPTIVE WEIGHTED FUSION OF MULTIPLE MR SEQUENCES FOR 69
BRAIN LESION SEGMENTATION
Florence Forbes, Senan Doyle, INRIA Grenoble Rhone-Alpes, UK, France; Daniel Garcia-Lorenzo, Christian
Barillot, INRIA Rennes Bretagne Atlantique, France; Michel Dojat, INSERM, France
WE-PS2.5: TEMPLATE METHOD TO IMPROVE BRAIN SEGMENTATION FROM 73
INHOMOGENEOUS BRAIN MAGNETIC RESONANCE IMAGES AT HIGH FIELDS
Marcelo Castro, Jianhua Yao, Yuxi Pang, Eva Baker, John Butman, David Thomasson, National Institutes ofHealth, United States
WE-PS2.6: A REACTION-DIFFUSION MODEL OF THE HUMAN BRAIN 77
DEVELOPMENT
Julien Lefevre, LSIS, UMR CNRS 6168, Universite Aix-Marseille II, France; Jean-Franqois Mangin, CEA,I2BM, Neurospin, France
WE-PS2.7: EARLY ALZHEIMER'S DISEASE DIAGNOSIS USING PARTIAL LEAST 81
SQUARES AND RANDOM FORESTS
Javier Ramirez, Juan M. Gorriz, Fermm Segovia, Rosa Chaves, Diego Salas-Gonzalez, Miriam Lopez, IgnacioAlvarez, Pablo Padilla, University of Granada, Spain
WE-PS2.8: APPROXIMATING TUMOR INDUCED BRAIN DEFORMATION USING 85
DIRECTLY MANIPULATED FREE FORM DEFORMATION
Stefan Becker, Andreas Mang, Alina Toma, Thorsten M. Buzug, University ofLiibeck, Germany
WE-PS2.9: UNSUPERVISED SEGMENTATION OF BRAIN TISSUE IN MULTIVARIATE 89
MRI
Alexandra Constantin, Ruzena Bajcsy, University of California, Berkeley, United States; Sarah Nelson,
University of California, San Francisco, United States
WE-PS2.10: AUTOMATED SEGMENTATION OF BRAIN LESIONS BY COMBINING 93
INTENSITY AND SPATIAL INFORMATION
Bilwaj Gaonkar, Guray Erus, Nick Biyan, Christos Davatzikos, University ofPennsylvania, United States
WE-PS2.11: A NEW FRAMEWORK FOR ANALYZING WHITE MATTER MATURATION 97
IN EARLY BRAIN DEVELOPMENT
Marcel Prastawa, NedaSadeghi, University of Utah, United States; John Gilmore, WeiliLin, University ofNorth Carolina, United States; Guido Gerig, University of Utah, United States
WE-PS2.12: A GENETIC ANALYSIS OF CORTICAL THICKNESS IN 372 TWINS 101
AnandA. Joshi, University of California, Los Angeles, United States; Natasha Lepore, University of Southern
California, United States; Shantanu Joshi, Agatha D. Lee, Marina Barysheva, University of California, Los
Angeles, United States; Greig I. de Zubicaray, University ofQueensland, Australia; Margaret J. Wright,Queensland Institute ofMedical Research, Australia; Katie L. McMahon, University of Queensland, Australia;Arthur Toga, Paul M. Thompson, University of California, Los Angeles, United States
WE-PS2.13: AUTOMATIC VOLUMETRY CAN REVEAL VISUALLY UNDETECTED 105
DISEASE FEATURES ONBRAIN MR IMAGES IN TEMPORAL LOBE EPILEPSY
Shiva Keihaninejad, Rolf A. Heckemann, Ioannis S. Gousias, Paul Aljabar, Joseph V. Hajnal, Daniel Rueckert,Alexander Hammers, Imperial College London, United Kingdom
xi
WE-PS2.14: IMAGE-BASED DETECTION OF CORPUS CALLOSUM VARIABILITY FOR 109
MORE ACCURATE DISCRIMINATION BETWEEN DYSLEXIC AND NORMAL
BRAINS
Ahmed Elnakib, Ayman El-Baz, Biolmaging Laboratory, University ofLouisville, United States; Manuel
Casanova, University ofLouisville, United States; Georgy Gimel'farb, University ofAuckland, New Zealand;
Andrew Switala, University ofLouisville, United States
WE-PS2.15: CANONICAL CORRELATION ANALYSIS APPLIED TO FUNCTIONAL 113
CONNECTIVITY IN MEG
Juan L.P. Soto, Dimitrios Pantazis, University ofSouthern California, United States; KarimJerbi, University
Lyon 1, France; Sylvdin Baillet, Medical College of Wisconsin, United States; Richard M. Leahy, University of
Southern California, United States
WE-PS3: BIOLOGICAL IMAGING AND ANALYSIS I
WE-PS3.1: PAPSYNTH: SIMULATED BRIGHT-FIELD IMAGES OF CERVICAL SMEARS 117
Patrik Malm, Anders Brun, Ewert Bengtsson, Uppsala University, Sweden
WE-PS3.2: GAUSSIAN MIXTURES FOR INTENSITY MODELING OF SPOTS IN 121
MICROSCOPY
Kangyu Pan, Anil Kokaram, Jens Hillebrand, Mani Ramaswami, Trinity College Dublin, Ireland
WE-PS3.3: CELL SEGMENTATION IN MICROSCOPY IMAGERY USING A BAG OF 125
LOCAL BAYESIAN CLASSIFIERS
Zhaozheng Yin, Ryoma Bise, Carnegie Mellon University, United States; Mei Chen, Intel Labs Pittsburgh,United States; Takeo Kanade, Carnegie Mellon University, United States
WE-PS3.4: A GRAPH-BASED METHOD FOR DETECTING CHARACTERISTIC 129
PHENOTYPES FROM BIOMEDICAL IMAGES
Wei Wang, Cheng Chen, Tao Peng, Dejan Slepcev, Carnegie Mellon University, United States; John A. Ozolek,Children's Hospital ofPittsburgh, United States; Gustavo Rohde, Carnegie Mellon University, United States
WE-PS3.5: DISCRIMINATIVE SPARSE REPRESENTATIONS FOR CERVIGRAM IMAGE 133
SEGMENTATION
Shaoting Zhang, Junzhou Huang, Rutgers, The State University ofNew Jersey, United States; Wei Wang,Xiaolei Huang, Lehigh University, United States; Dimitris Metaxas, Rutgers, The State University ofNew
Jersey, United States
WE-PS3.6: DETECTION OF HEMATOPOIETIC STEM CELLS IN MICROSCOPY 137
IMAGES USING A BANK OF RING FILTERS
Sungeun Eom, Ryoma Bise, Takeo Kanade, Carnegie Mellon University, United States
WE-PS3.7: NONPARAMETRIC SEGMENTATION AND CLASSIFICATION OF SMALL 141
SIZEIRREGULARLY SHAPED STEM CELL NUCLEI USING ADJUSTABLE
WINDOWING
Nathan Lowry, Massachusetts Institute ofTechnology / Draper Laboratory, United States; Rami Mangoubi,Mukund Desai, The Charles Stark Draper Laboratory, Inc., United States; Paul Sammak, University ofPittsburgh, United States
WE-PS3.8: METAMERISM IN MULTISPECTRAL IMAGING OF HISTOPATHOLOGY 145
SPECIMENS
William Cukierski, David Foran, University ofMedicine and Dentistry ofNew Jersey, United States
xii
WE-PS3.9: KI-67 HOT-SPOTS DETECTION ON GLIOBLASTOMA TISSUE SECTIONS 149
Xavier Moles Lopez, Olivier Debeir, Universite Libre de Bruxelles, Belgium; Calliope Maris, Isabelle Roland,Isabelle Salmon, Erasmus Hospital, Universite Libre de Bruxelles, Belgium; Christine Decaestecker, Universite
Libre de Bruxelles, Belgium
WE-PS3.10: GRAPH-BASED MULTI-RESOLUTION SEGMENTATION OF 153
HISTOLOGICAL WHOLE SLIDE IMAGES
Vincent Roullier, Vinh-Thong Ta, Olivier Lezoray, Abderrahim Elmoataz, GREYC-UMR-CNRS 6072, France
WE-PS3.11: IMPROVED AUTOMATED LOCALIZATION AND QUANTIFICATION OF 157
PROTEIN MULTIPLEXES VIA MULTISPECTRAL FLUORESCENCE IMAGING IN
HETEROGENOUS BIOPSY SAMPLES
Marina Sapir, Faisal Khan, Yevgen Vengrenyuk, Gerardo Fernandez, Ricardo Mesa-Tejada, Stefan Hamman,Mikhail Teverovskiy, Michael Donovan, Aureon Laboratories, Inc, United States
WE-PS3.12: A GENERAL APPROACH FORSEGMENTING ELONGATED AND STUBBY 161
BIOLOGICAL OBJECTS: EXTENDING A CHORD LENGTH TRANSFORM WITH
THE RADON TRANSFORM
QuanXue, Nick Jones, Mark Leake, University of Oxford, United Kingdom
WE-PS3.13: MULTIPHASE LEVEL SET FOR AUTOMATED DELINEATION OF 165
MEMBRANE-BOUND MACROMOLECULES
Hang Chang, Bahrain Parvin, Lawrance Berkeley National Laboratory, United States
WE-PS3.14: CLASSIFICATION BY BOOTSTRAPPING IN SINGLE PARTICLE 169
METHODS
Hstau Y. Liao, Joachim Frank, Columbia University, United States
WE-PS4: CANCER IMAGING AND ANALYSIS
WE-PS4.1: DETECTION AND RETRIEVAL OF CYSTS IN JOINT ULTRASOUND 173
B-MODE AND ELASTICITYBREAST IMAGES
Jingdan Zhang, Shaohua Zhou, Shelby Brunke, Carol Lowery, Dorin Comaniciu, Siemens, United States
WE-PS4.2: CELL-BASED GRAPH CUT FOR SEGMENTATION OF 2D/3D 177
SONOGRAPHIC BREAST IMAGES
Hsin-Hung Chiang, Jie-Zhi Cheng, Pei-Kai Hung, Chun-You Liu, Cheng-Hong Chung, Chung-Ming Chen,
National Taiwan University, Taiwan
WE-PS4.3: INTERPRETING ULTRASOUND ELASTOGRAPHY: IMAGE REGISTRATION 181
OF BREAST CANCER ULTRASOUND ELASTOGRAPHY TO HISTOPATHOLOGY
IMAGES
Brian Chuang, University of Oxford, United Kingdom; Andriy Myronenko, Oregon Health & Science
University, United States; Ruth English, Oxford Radclijfe Hospitals NHS Trust, United Kingdom; Alison Noble,
University of Oxford, United Kingdom
WE-PS4.4: PHARMACOKINETIC MODELS IN CLINICAL PRACTICE: WHAT MODEL 185
TO USE FOR DCE-MRI OF THE BREAST?
Geert Litjens, Marieke Heisen, Eindhoven University of Technology, Netherlands; Johannes Buurman, PhilipsHealthcare, Netherlands; Bart M. ter Haar Romeny, Eindhoven University of Technology, Netherlands
xiii
WE-PS4.5: A REGION-BASED ACTIVE CONTOUR METHOD FOR EXTRACTION OF 189
BREAST SKIN-LINE IN MAMMOGRAMS
Sheshadri Thiruvenkadam, Mausumi Achaiya, Neeba NV, Priyavrat Jhunjhunwala, Sohan Ranjan, General
Electric, India
WE-PS4.6: APPEARANCE ANALYSIS FOR DIAGNOSING MALIGNANT LUNG NODULES 193
Ayman El-baz, Biobnaging Laboratory, University ofLouisville, United States; Georgy Gimel'farb, University
ofAuckland, New Zealand; Robert Falk, Jewish Hospital, Louisville, Kentucky, United States; Mohamed El-
Ghar, University ofMansoura, Egypt
WE-PS4.7: MAMMOGRAPHIC IMAGE CLASSIFICATION USING HISTOGRAM 197
INTERSECTION
Erkang Cheng, Nianhua Xie, Haibin Ling, Temple University, United States; Predrag Bakic, Andrew Maidment,
University ofPennsylvania, United States; Vasileios Megalooikonomou, Temple University, United States
WE-PS4.8: GENERALIZED OPTIMAL QUANTITATIVE INDEX OF DUAL-TIME 201
FDG-PET IMAGING IN LUNG CANCER DIAGNOSIS
Xiujuan Zheng, Guangjian Tian, The Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hong Kong SAR of China; Lingfeng
Wen, Royal Prince Alfred Hospital, Australia; David Dagan Feng, The Hong Kong Polytechnic University,
Hong Kong SAR ofChina
WE-PS4.9: MODELING THERMOGRAPHY OF THE TUMOROUS HUMAN BREAST: 205
FROM FORWARD PROBLEM TO INVERSE PROBLEM SOLVING
Li Jiang, George Washington University, United States; Wang Zhan, University of California, San Francisco,
United States; Murray Loew, George Washington University, United States
WE-PS4.10: ANADAPTIVE TRACKING ALGORITHM OFLUNG TUMORS IN 209
FLUOROSCOPY USING ONLINE LEARNED COLLABORATIVE TRACKERS
Baiyang Liu, Rutgers, The State University ofNew Jersey, United States; Lin Yang, University ofMedicine
and Dentistry ofNew Jersey, United States; Casimir Kulikowski, Rutgers, The State University ofNew Jersey,United States; Jinghao Zhou, University ofMedicine and Dentistry ofNew Jersey, United States; Leiguang
Gong, IBM T. J. Watson Research Center, United States; David Foran, Salma Jabbour, Ning Yue, University of
Medicine and Dentistry ofNew Jersey, United States
WE-PS4.11: TWIN TARGET CORRECTION FOR ULTRA-WIDEBAND RADAR IMAGING 213
OF BREAST TUMOURS
Jean-Francois Deprez, University of Oxford, United Kingdom; Maciek Klemm, University of Bristol, United
Kingdom; Penny Probert Smith, University of Oxford, United Kingdom; Ian Craddock, University ofBristol,United Kingdom
WE-PS4.12: JOINT VARIATIONAL SEGMENTATION OF CT-PET DATA FOR TUMORAL 217
LESIONS
Julien Wojak, Elsa D. Angelini, Isabelle Bloch, Telecom ParisTech, France
WE-PS4.13: PROBABILISTIC BRANCHING NODE DETECTION USING ADABOOST 221
AND HYBRID LOCAL FEATURES
Tatyana Nuzhnaya, Michael Bamathan, Haibin Ling, Vasileios Megalooikonomou, Temple University, United
States; Predrag Bakic, Andrew Maidment, University ofPennsylvania, United States
WE-PS4.14: EXEMPLAR-BASED SEGMENTATION OF PIGMENTED SKIN LESIONS 225FROMDERMOSCOPY IMAGES
Howard Zhou, James M. Rehg, Georgia Institute of Technology, United States; Mei Chen, Intel Labs
Pittsburgh, United States
xiv
WE-PS4.15: PREDICTING CLASSIFIER PERFORMANCE WITH A SMALL TRAINING 229
SET: APPLICATIONS TO COMPUTER-AIDED DIAGNOSIS AND PROGNOSIS
Ajay Basavanhally, Scott Doyle, Anant Madabhushi, Rutgers, The State University ofNew Jersey, United States
WE-PS4.16: SINGLE-VIEW 2D/3D REGISTATION FOR X-RAY GUIDED 233
BRONCHOSCOPY
Di Xu, Johns Hopkins University, United States; Sheng Xu, Philips Research North America, United States;Daniel A. Herzka, Johns Hopkins University, United States; Rex Yung, Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions,
United States; Martin Bergtholdt, Philips Research North Europe, Germany; Luis F. Gutierrez, Image Guided
Interventions, Philips Healthcare, United States; Elliot R. McVeigh, Johns Hopkins University, United States
WE-OS1: BRAIN IMAGING AND ANALYSIS
WE-OS1.1: A RIEMANNIAN MODEL OF REGIONAL DEGENERATION OF THE 237
HIPPOCAMPUS IN ALZHEIMER'S DISEASE
Xiuwen Liu, Florida State University, United States; Yonggang Shi, University ofCalifornia, Los Angeles,United States; Ying Wang, Florida State University, United States; Paul M. Thompson, University of California,Los Angeles, United States; Washington Mio, Florida State University, United States
WE-OS1.2: VENTRICULARMAPS IN 804 SUBJECTS CORRELATE WITH COGNITIVE 241
DECLINE, CSF PATHOLOGY, AND IMMINENT ALZHEIMER'S DISEASE
Yi-Yu Chou, Natasha Lepore, Priya Saharan, Sarah Madsen, Xue Hua, University of California, Los Angeles,United States; Clifford Jack, Mayo Clinic, United States; Leslie Shaw, JohnTrojanowski, University of
Pennsylvania, United States; Michael Michael W. Weiner, University of California, San Francisco, United
States; Arthur Toga, PaulM. Thompson, University of California, Los Angeles, United States
WE-OS1.3: IN VIVO BRAIN ELASTICITY MAPPING IN SMALL ANIMALS USING 245
ULTRASOUND AND ITS APPLICATION TO CEREBRAL ISCHEMIA
Emilie Mace, Institut Langevin, France; Ivan Cohen, Cortex et epilepsie, France; Abraham Martin, CEA,
France; Gabriel Montaldo, Mathias Fink, Institut Langevin, France; Bertrand Tavitian, CEA, France; Mickael
Tanter, Institut Langevin, France
WE-OS1.4: EARLY DIAGNOSIS OF DEMENTIA BASED ON INTERSUBJECT 249
WHOLE-BRAIN DISSIMILARITIES
Stefan Klein, Erasmus MC - University Medical Center Rotterdam, Netherlands; Marco Loog, Delft University
of Technology, Netherlands; Fedde van derLijn, Tom den Heijer, Erasmus MC - University Medical Center
Rotterdam, Netherlands; Alexander Hammers, Neurodis Foundation, France; Marleen de Bruijne, Aad van
der Lugt, Erasmus MC - University Medical Center Rotterdam, Netherlands; Robert Duin, Delft Universityof Technology, Netherlands; Monique Breteler, Wiro Niessen, Erasmus MC - University Medical Center
Rotterdam, Netherlands
WE-OS2: MR IMAGING
WE-OS2.1: A SPARSE BAYESIAN LEARNING FOR HYGHLY ACCELERATED DYNAMIC 253
MRI
Hong Jung, Jong Chul Ye, Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology, Republic ofKorea
WE-OS2.2: AN ACCELERATED ITERATIVE REWEIGHTED LEAST SQUARES 257
ALGORITHM FOR COMPRESSED SENSING MRI
Sathish Ramani, Jeffrey Fessler, University of Michigan, United States
XV
WE-OS2.3: ANALYTICAL FORM OF SHEPP-LOGAN PHANTOM FOR PARALLEL MRI 261
Matthieu Guerquin-Kern, Fikret Isik Karahanoglu, Dimitri Van De Ville, Ecole Polytechnique Federale
de Lausanne (EPFL), Switzerland; Klaas Pruessmann, ETH Zurich, Switzerland; Michael Unser, Ecole
Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne (EPFL), Switzerland
WE-OS2.4: A FAST & ACCURATE NON ITERATIVE ALGORITHM FORREGULARIZED 265
NON CARTESIAN MRI
Satyananda Kashyap, Mathews Jacob, University ofRochester, United States
WE-SS1: COMPUTER AIDED DIAGNOSIS
WE-SS1.1: CURRENT CONCEPTS IN COMPUTER-AIDED DETECTION FOR CT 269
COLONOGRAPHY
Ronald Summers, National Institutes ofHealth, United States
WE-SS1.2: COMPUTER AIDED DETECTION IN BREAST IMAGING: MORE THAN A 273
PERCEPTION ADD.
Nico Karssemeijer, Radboud University Nijmegen Medical Centre, Netherlands
WE-SS1.3: COMPUTER-AIDED DIAGNOSIS IN CHEST IMAGING: HOW TO 274
IMPROVE PERFORMANCE AND AVOID REINVENTING THE WHEEL
Bram van Ginneken, Image Sciences Institute, University Medical Center Utrecht, Netherlands
WE-SS1.4: COMPUTER-ASSISTANCE IN NEUROIMAGING: FROM QUANTITATIVE 275
IMAGEANALYSIS TO COMPUTER-AIDED DIAGNOSIS
Horst Karl Halm, Fraunhofer MEVIS, Germany
WE-SS2: ULTRASOUND IMAGING AND ANALYSIS
WE-SS2.1: REAL TIME QUANTITATIVE ELASTOGRAPHY USING SUPERSONIC 276
SHEAR WAVE IMAGING
Michael Tanter, Mathieu Pernot, Gabriel Montaldo, Jean Luc Gennisson, Eric Bavu, Emilie Mace, Thu-Mai
Nguyen, Mathieu Couade, Mathias Fink, Langevin Institute (CNRS UMR 7587), Inserm U979, France
WE-SS2.2: ROBUST ULTRASOUND IMAGE ANALYSIS USING LEARNING 280
Dorin Comaniciu, Siemens Corporate Research, United States
WE-SS2.3: INTRAVASCULAR ULTRASOUND: ASSESSMENT OF ATHEROSCLEROSIS 281
Antonius FW van der Steen, Gijs van Soest, Marcia Emmer, David Maresca, Krista Jansen, Frits Mastik,
Patrick WSerruys, Evelyn Regar, Erasmus MC - University Medical Center Rotterdam, Netherlands
WE-SS2.4: NEW DEVELOPMENTS IN FUNCTIONAL CARDIAC IMAGING 282
Jan D'hooge, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Belgium
TH-PS1: ULTRASOUNDIMAGING AND ANALYSIS
TH-PS1.1: ON ESTIMATING DE-SPECKLED AND SPECKLE COMPONENTS FROM 284
B-MODE ULTRASOUND IMAGES
Jose Seabra, Jodo Sanches, Instituto Superior Tecnico, Portugal
xvi
TH-PS1.2: RETRIEVAL AND CLASSIFICATION OF ULTRASOUND IMAGES OF 288
OVARIAN CYSTS COMBINING TEXTURE FEATURES AND HISTOGRAM
MOMENTS
Abu Sayeed Md. Sohail, Concordia University, Canada; Md. MahmudurRahman, National Institutes ofHealth,United States; Prabir Bhattacharya, University of Cincinnati, United States; Srinivasan Krishnamurthy, RoyalVictoria Hospital, Canada; Sudhir P. Mudur, Concordia University, Canada
TH-PS1.3: ON THE INFLUENCE OF INTERPOLATION ON PROBABILISTIC 292
MODELS FORULTRASONIC IMAGES
Gonzalo Vegas-Sdnchez-Ferrero, Diego Martin-Martinez, Santiago Aja-Ferndndez, Cesar Palencia,
Universidad de Valladolid, Spain
TH-PS1.4: QUANTITATIVE RESOLUTION OF ULTRASOUND IMAGES 296
Marie Ploquin, University of Tours, France; Denis Kouame, University of Toulouse, France
TH-PS1.5: ASSESSING TUMOURS VASCULARITY WITH 3D CONTRAST-ENHANCED 300
ULTRASOUND: A NEW SEMI-AUTOMATED SEGMENTATION FRAMEWORK
Anne Gasnier, Roberto Ardon, Cybele Ciofolo-Veit, Philips Medical Systems Research Paris, France; Edward
Leen, Imperial College London, United Kingdom; Jean-Michel Correas, Necker Hospital, France
TH-PS1.6: SEGMENTATION OF 2D STRESS ECHOCARDIOGRAPHY SEQUENCES 304
USING REST-BASED PATIENT-SPECIFIC PRIOR INFORMATION
Adeala Zabair, Alison Noble, University ofOxford, United Kingdom
TH-PS1.8: A COUPLED FILTERING METHOD TO SOLVE FEATURE-MOTION 312
DECORRELATION IN SPECKLE TRACKING
Tianzhu Liang, Weichuan Yu, The Hong Kong University ofScience and Technology, Hong Kong SAR of China
TH-PS1.9: MULTI-DOF PROBE TRAJECTORY RECONSTRUCTION WITHLOCAL 316
SENSORS FOR 2D-TO-3D ULTRASOUND
Philipp J. Stolka, Hyun-Jae Kang, Johns Hopkins University, United States; Michael Choti, EmadM, Boctor,
Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions, United States
TH-PS1.10: AUTOMATIC ACTIVE APPEARANCE MODEL SEGMENTATION OF 3D 320
ECHOCARDIOGRAMS
K. Y. Esther Leung, Erasmus MC - University Medical Center Rotterdam, Netherlands; Marijn Van Stralen,
University Medical Center Utrecht, Netherlands; Gerard Van Burken, Nico De Jong, Johan G. Bosch, Erasmus
MC - University Medical Center Rotterdam, Netherlands
TH-PS1.11: ULTRAFAST COMPOUND DOPPLER IMAGING: A NEW APPROACH OF 324
DOPPLER FLOW ANALYSIS
Gabriel Montaldo, Emilie Mace, Institute Langevin- Laboratoire Ondes et Acoustique, France; Ivan Cohen,
INSERMEMI 0224, France; Jeremy Berckoff, Supersonic Imagine, France; Mickael Tanter, Mathias Fink,
Institute Langevin- Laboratoire Ondes et Acoustique, France
xvii
TH-PS1.12: INCREASING TEMPORAL RESOLUTION OF 3D TRANSESOPHAGEAL 328
ULTRASOUND BY RIGID BODY REGISTRATION OF SEQUENTIAL,TEMPORALLY OFFSET SEQUENCES
Francisco J. Contijoch, Johns Hopkins University, United States; Laura Fernandez-de-Manuel, Universidad
Politecnica de Madrid, Spain; Tri Ngo, Johns Hopkins University, United States; Joshua Stearns, Kelly L.
Grogan, MaryBeth Brady, Johns Hopkins Hospital, United States; Philippe M. Burlina, Johns Hopkins Applied
Physics Laboratory, United States; Andres Santos, Universidad Politecnica de Madrid, Spain; David D. Yuh,
Johns Hopkins Hospital, United States; Daniel A. Herzka, Johns Hopkins University, United States; Maria J.
Ledesma-Carbayo, Universidad Politecnica de Madrid, Spain; Elliot R. McVeigh, Johns Hopkins University,United States
TH-PS1.13: ACCURATE SEGMENTATION OF ULTRASOUND IMAGES USING THE 332
MOTION CUE
Xiaowei Zhou, Tianzhu Liang, Weichuan Yu, The Hong Kong University ofScience and Technology, HongKong SAR of China
TH-PS2: IMAGE REGISTRATION
TH-PS2.1: LUNG CT REGISTRATION COMBININGINTENSITY, CURVES AND 340SURFACES
Vladlena Gorbunova, University of Copenhagen, Denmark; Stanley Durrleman, INRIA Sophia Antipolis,France; PechinLo, University of Copenhagen, Denmark; Xavier Pennec, INRIA Sophia Antipolis, France;Marleen de Bruijne, University of Copenhagen, Denmark
TH-PS2.2: A NOVEL MULTI-LAYER FRAMEWORK FOR NON-RIGID IMAGE 344REGISTRATION
Shu Liao, Albert C.S. Chung, The Hong Kong University ofScience and Technology, Hong Kong SAR of China
TH-PS2.3: VOXEL BASED NONRIGID IMAGE REGISTRATION USING LOCAL AND 348PARTIAL VOLUME SIMILARITY MEASURESDirk Loeckx, Frederik Maes, Dirk Vandermeulen, Paul Suetens, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Belgium
TH-PS2.4: DATA DRIVEN GROUPWISE REGISTRATION OF DIFFUSION WEIGHTED 352IMAGES
Andrew Melbourne, David Hawkes, David Atkinson, University College London, United Kingdom
TH-PS2.5: NONRIGID REGISTRATION WITH DIFFERENTIAL BIAS CORRECTION 356USING NORMALISED MUTUAL INFORMATION
MarcModat, Gerard R. Ridgway, David Hawkes, Nick Fox, Sebastien Ourselin, University College London,United Kingdom
TH-PS2.6: MODELING TOPOLOGICAL CHANGES IN DEFORMABLE REGISTRATION 360
Xiaoxing Li, Chris Wyatt, Virginia Tech, United States
xviii
TH-PS2.7: STATISTICALLY ASSISTED FLUID IMAGE REGISTRATION ALGORITHM - 364
SAFIRA
Caroline C. Brim, University ofCalifornia, Los Angeles, United States; Natasha Lepore, Children's Hospital,Los Angeles, United States; Xavier Pennec, Asclepios Project, France; Yi-Yu Chou, Agatha D. Lee, Marina
Barysheva, University of California, Los Angeles, United States; Greigl. deZubicaray, Katie L. McMahon, The
University of Queensland, Australia; Margaret J. Wright, Queensland Institute ofMedical Research, Australia;
Paul M. Thompson, University of California, Los Angeles, United States
TH-PS2.8: MULTI-MODAL NON-RIGID IMAGE REGISTRATION BASED ON 368
SIMILARITY AND DISSIMILARITY WITH THE PRIOR JOINT INTENSITY
DISTRIBUTIONS
Ronald W. K. So, Albert C.S. Chung, The Hong Kong University ofScience and Technology, Hong Kong SAR of
China
TH-PS2.9: MULTI-MODAL DIFFEOMORPHIC DEMONS REGISTRATION BASED ON 372
POINT-WISE MUTUAL INFORMATION
Huanxiang Lu, Mauricio Reyes, University ofBern, Switzerland; Amira Serifovic-Trbalic, University ofTuzla,Bosnia and Herzegovina; Stefan Weber, University ofBern, Switzerland; Yasuo Sakurai, Hitoshi Yamagata,TOSHIBA Medical Systems Corporation, Japan; Philippe C. Cattin, University ofBasel, Switzerland
TH-PS2.10: MULTI-ATTRIBUTE COMBINED MUTUAL INFORMATION (MACMI): AN 376
IMAGE REGISTRATION FRAMEWORK FOR LEVERAGING MULTIPLEDATA
CHANNELS
Jonathan Chappelow, Anant Madabhushi, Rutgers, The State University ofNew Jersey, United States
TH-PS2.11: BI-DIRECTIONAL LABELED POINT MATCHING 380
Roshni Bhagalia, James V. Miller, Arunabha Roy, GE Global Research, United States
TH-PS2.12: ACCOUNTING FOR CHANGING OVERLAP IN VARIATIONAL IMAGE 384
REGISTRATION
Nathan Cahill, Rochester Institute of Technology, United States; Alison Noble, University of Oxford, United
Kingdom; David Hawkes, University College London, United Kingdom
TH-PS2.13: SENSORLESS AND REAL-TIME REGISTRATION BETWEEN 2D 388
ULTRASOUND AND PREOPERATIVE IMAGES OF THE LIVER
Duhgoon Lee, Woo Hyun Nam, Korea Advanced Institute ofScience and Technology, Republic of Korea;
Donggyu Hyun, Medison Co., Ltd., Republic ofKorea; Jae Young Lee, Seoul National University Hospital,
Republic ofKorea; Jong Beom Ra, Korea Advanced Institute ofScience and Technology, Republic ofKorea
TH-PS2.14: NON-RIGID COREGISTRATION OF DIFFUSION KURTOSIS DATA 392
Jelle Veraart, University ofAntwerp, Belgium; Wim Van Hecke, Antwerp University Hospital, Belgium; Ines
Blockx, Annemie Van Der Linden, Marleen Verhoye, Jan Sijbers, University ofAntwerp, Belgium
TH-PS2.15: GROUPWISE REGISTRATION FROM EXEMPLAR TO GROUP MEAN: 396
EXTENDING HAMMER TO GROUPWISE REGISTRATION
Guorong Wu, Pew-Thian Yap, Qian Wang, Dinggang Shen, University ofNorth Carolina at Chapel Hill, United
States
TH-PS2.16: DETECTING MUTUALLY-SALIENT LANDMARK PAIRS WITH MRF 400
REGULARIZATION
Yangming Ou, University ofPennsylvania, United States; Ahmed Besbes, Ecole Centrale de Paris - GALEN
Group INRIA Saclay, France; Michel Bilello, Mohamed Mansour, Christos Davatzikos, University of
Pennsylvania, United States; Nikos Paragios, Ecole Centrale de Paris - GALEN Group INRIA Saclay, France
xix
TH-PS3: SHAPE MODELING AND ANALYSIS
TH-PS3.1: JOINT ANALYSIS OF CORTICAL FOLDING PATTERN, THICKNESS AND 404
FIBER DENSITY USING STRUCTURAL AND DTI DATA
Yixuan Yuan, Lei Guo, Gang Li, Tuo Zhang, Xintao Hu, Northwestern Polytechnical University, China;
Tianming Liu, The University ofGeorgia, United States
TH-PS3.2: PREDICTION OF SCOLIOSIS CURVE TYPE BASED ON THEANALYSIS 408
OF TRUNK SURFACE TOPOGRAPHY
Lama Seoud, Mathias Adankon, Ecole Polytechnique de Montreal, Canada; Hubert Labelle, Sainte-Justine
Hospital Research Center, Canada; Jean Dansereau, Farida Cheriet, Ecole Polytechnique de Montreal,
Canada
TH-PS3.3: EVALUATION OF SAGITTAL VERTEBRAL ROTATION IN CT IMAGES BY 412
MANUAL AND AUTOMATED METHODS
Tomaz Vrtovec, Franjo Pernus, Bostjan Likar, University ofLjubljana, Slovenia
TH-PS3.4: AUTOMATED QUANTIFICATION AND ANALYSIS OF MANDD3ULAR 416
ASYMMETRY
TronA. Darvann, Nuno V. Hermann, PerLarsen, University of Copenhagen, Denmark; Hildur Olafsdottir,
Technical University ofDenmark, Denmark; Izabella V. Hansen, University of Copenhagen, Denmark; Hanne
D. Hove, Copenhagen University Hospital Rigshospitalet, Denmark; LeifChristensen, Arhus University
Hospital, Denmark; Daniel Rueckert, Imperial College London, United Kingdom; Sven Kreiborg, University of
Copenhagen, Denmark
TH-PS3.5: AUTOMATIC INFERIOR VENA CAVA SEGMENTATIONIN 420
CONTRAST-ENHANCED CT VOLUMES
Thierry Lefevre, Benoit Mory, Roberto Ardon, Javier Sanchez-Castro, Philips Healthcare, France; Anthony
Yezzi, Georgia Institute ofTechnology, United States
TH-PS3.6: SHAPE-BASED SEMI-AUTOMATIC HIPPOCAMPAL SUBFIELD 424
SEGMENTATION WITHLEARNING-BASED BIAS REMOVAL
Hongzhi Wang, Sandhitsu Das, John Pluta, Caryne Craige, Murat Altinay, University ofPennsylvania, United
States; Michael Weiner, Susanne Mueller, Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center, United States; Paul
Yushkevich, University ofPennsylvania, United States
TH-PS3.7: COMBINATION OF SHAPE-CONSTRAINED AND INFLATION DEFORMABLE 428
MODELS WITH APPLICATION TO THE SEGMENTATION OF THE LEFT ATRIAL
APPENDAGE
Pol Grasland-Mongrain, Ecole Normale Superieure de Cachan, France; Jochen Peters, Olivier Ecabert,
Philips Research Europe - Aachen, Germany
TH-PS3.8: AUTOMATIC SEGMENTATION OF BONES AND INTER-IMAGE 432
ANATOMICAL CORRESPONDENCE BY VOLUMETRIC STATISTICAL
MODELLING OF KNEE MRI
Tomos Williams, University ofManchester, United Kingdom; Graham Vincent, Mike Bowes, Imorphics Ltd,United Kingdom; Timothy Cootes, Sharon Balamoody, Charles Hutchinson, University ofManchester, United
Kingdom; John Waterton, AstraZeneca, United Kingdom; Chris Taylor, University ofManchester, United
Kingdom
XX
TH-PS3.9: TETRAHEDRAL MESH GENERATION FOR MEDICAL IMAGES WITH 436
MULTIPLE REGIONS USING ACTIVE SURFACES
Carl Lederman, AnandA. Joshi, John Darrell Van Horn, Ivo Dinov, Luminita Vese, Arthur Toga, University ofCalifornia, Los Angeles, United States
TH-PS3.10: IMPROVING THE DETECTION OF OSTEOPOROSIS FROM DENTAL 440
RADIOGRAPHS USING ACTIVE APPEARANCE MODELS
Martin Roberts, James Graham, Hugh Devlin, University ofManchester, United Kingdom
TH-PS3.11: 3D LEVEL SET ESOPHAGUS SEGMENTATION IN THORACIC CT IMAGES 444
USING SPATIAL, APPEARANCE AND SHAPE MODELS
Sila Kurugol, Jennifer G. Dy, Northeastern University, United States; Gregory C. Sharp, Massachusetts
General Hospital and Han'ard Medical School, United States; Dana H. Brooks, Northeastern University,United States
TH-PS3.12: A METHOD FOR QUANTITATIVE EVALUATION OF STATISTICAL SHAPE 448
MODELS USING MORPHOMETRY
Sebastian T. Gollmer, Thorsten M. Buzug, University of Liibeck, Germany
TH-PS3.13: PARAMETRIC REGRESSION OF 3D MEDICAL IMAGES THROUGH THE 452
EXPLORATION OF NON-PARAMETRIC REGRESSION MODELS
Christof Seller, University ofBern, Switzerland; Xavier Pennec, INRIA Sophia, France; Mauricio Reyes,University ofBern, Switzerland
TH-PS3.14: 3D RECONSTRUCTION OF BOTH SHAPE AND BONE MINERAL 456
DENSITY DISTRIBUTION OF THEFEMUR FROM DXA IMAGES
Ludovic Humbert, Tristan Whitmarsh, Mathieu De Craene, Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Spain; Luis Migueldel Rio Barquero, CETIR Centre Medic, Spain; Karl Fritscher, Rainer Schubert, The Health and Life Sciences
University (UMIT), Austria; Felix Eckstein, PMU (Paracelsus Medical University), Austria; Thomas Link,
University of California, San Francisco, United States; Alejandro Frangi, Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Spain
TH-PS4: CARDIAC IMAGING AND ANALYSIS
TH-PS4.1: FULLY 5D RECONSTRUCTION OF GATED DYNAMIC CARDIAC SPECT 460
IMAGES USING TEMPORAL B-SPLINES
Xiaofeng Niu, Yongyi Yang, Illinois Institute of Technology, United States; Mingwu Jin, University of ColoradoDenver, United States
TH-PS4.2: AN MRI-BASED CARDIAC ELECTROANATOMICAL MAPPING SYSTEM WITH 464
SCATTERED DATA INTERPOLATION ALGORITHM
Gang Gao, Phani Chinchapatnam, Matthew Wright, Aruna Arujuna, Matthew Ginks, King's College London,
United Kingdom; Aldo Rinaldi, Guy's & St. Thomas' Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, United Kingdom;Kawal Rhode, King's College London, United Kingdom
TH-PS4.3: IDENTIFICATION OF MYOCARDIAL INFARCTION USING 468
THREE-DIMENSIONAL STRAIN TENSOR FRACTIONAL ANISOTROPY
Sahar Soleimanifard, Khaled Z. Abd-Ehnoniem, Harsh K. Agarwal, Miguel S. Tomas, Tetsuo Sasano, EvertjanVonken, Amr Youssef, M. Roselle Abraham, Theodore P. Abraham, Jeny L. Prince, Johns Hopkins University,United States
xxi
TH-PS4.4: AUTOMATIC SEGMENTATION OF PATHOLOGICAL TISSUES IN CARDIAC 472
MRI
Khaoula Elagouni, Cybele Ciofolo-Veit, BenoitMory, Philips Healthcare France, France
TH-PS4.5: BILINEAR POINT DISTRIBUTION MODELS FOR HEART MOTION 476
ANALYSIS
Rosa M. Figueras i Ventura, Come Hoogendoom, Federico Sukno, Alejandro Frangi, C1STIB-UPF, Spain
TH-PS4.6: CARDIAC LEFT ATRIUM CT IMAGE SEGMENTATION FOR ABLATION 480
GUIDANCE
Marc M.J. Koppert, Eindhoven University of Technology, Netherlands; Peter M.J. Rongen, Philips Healthcare,
Netherlands; Mathias Prokop, University Medical Center Utrecht, Netherlands; Bart M. ter Haar Romeny,Hans C. vanAssen, Eindhoven University ofTechnology, Netherlands
TH-PS4.7: CARDIAC SEGMENTATION IN MR CINE DATA USING INVERSE 484
CONSISTENT DEFORMABLE REGISTRATION
Marie-Pierre Jolly, Christoph Guetter, Jens Guehring, Siemens Corporate Research, United States
TH-PS4.8: PARTICLE FILTERING METHODS FOR MOTION ANALYSIS IN TAGGED 488
MRI
Ihor Smal, Wiro Niessen, Erik Meijering, Erasmus MC - University Medical Center Rotterdam, Netherlands
TH-PS4.9: SPATIO-TEMPORAL SEGMENTATION OF THE HEART IN 4D MRI IMAGES 492
USING GRAPH CUTS WITH MOTION CUES
Herve Lombaert, Farida Cheriet, Ecole Polytechnique de Montreal, Canada
TH-PS4.10: STATIC AND DYNAMIC CARDIAC MODELLING: INITIAL STRIDES AND 496
RESULTS TOWARDS A QUANTITATIVELY ACCURATE MECHANICAL HEART
MODEL
Christakis Constantinides, Nikolas Aristokleous, University of Cyprus, Cyprus; G. A. Johnson, Duke University,United States; Dimitris Perperidis, University of Cyprus, Greece
TH-PS4.11: AUTOMATED EVALUATION OF LEFT VENTRICULAR DIASTOLIC 500
FUNCTION USING VELOCITY-ENCODED MAGNETIC RESONANCE IMAGING:
CONVENTIONAL AND NEW PARAMETERS
Emilie Bollache, INSERM U678, France; Stephanie Clement-Guinaudeau, Ludivine Perdrix, MagalieLadouceur, European Hospital Georges Pompidou, France; Muriel Lefort, Alain De Cesare, Alain Herment,INSERM U678, France; Benott Diebold, Elie Mousseaux, European Hospital Georges Pompidou, France;Nadjia Kachenoura, INSERM U678, France
TH-PS4.12: PATIENT-SPECIFIC MODELING OF LEFT HEART ANATOMY, DYNAMICS 504AND HEMODYNAMICS FROM HIGH RESOLUTION 4D CT
Viorel Mihalef Razvan Ionasec, Yang Wang, Yefeng Zheng, Bogdan Georgescu, Dorin Comaniciu, Siemens
Corporate Research, United States
TH-PS4.13: MOTION-BASED, MULTI-MODALITY IMAGE REGISTRATION FOR 508
CARDIAC IMAGING
Alan Cebula, David Gilland, Jason Parker, Yunmei Chen, University ofFlorida, United States
TH-PS4.14: REGULARIZED MULTILEVEL B-SPLINE REGISTRATION: APPLICATION 512
TO CARDIAC MOTION ESTIMATION
Marco Mora, Juan Andrade, Catholic University ofMaule, Chile; Clovis Tauber, UMRS INSERM U930CNRS FRE2448 - University of Tours, France
xxii
TH-PS4.15: PHASE-BASED NON-RIGID REGISTRATION OF MYOCARDIAL 516
PERFUSION MRI IMAGE SEQUENCESLennart Tautz, Anja Hennemuth, Fraunhofer MEVIS, Germany; Mats Andersson, Linkoping University,Sweden; Achim Seeger, Eberhard Karls University Tuebingen, Germany; Hans Knutsson, Linkoping University,Sweden; Ola Friman, Fraunhofer MEVIS, Germany
TH-PS4.16: MOTION-COMPENSATED RECONSTRUCTION OF GATED CARDIAC 520
SPECT IMAGES USING A DEFORMABLE MESH MODEL
Thibault Marin, Miles N. Wernick, Yongyi Yang, Jovan G. Brankov, Illinois Institute of Technology, UnitedStates
TH-OS1: IMAGE REGISTRATION I
TH-OSl.l: A KERNEL-BASED GRAPHICAL MODEL FOR DIFFUSION TENSOR 524
REGISTRATION
Aristeidis Sotiras, Radhouene Neji, Ecole Centrale Paris /INRIA Saclay, France; Jean-Francois Deux, Centre
Hospitaller Universitaire Henri Mondor, France; Nikos Komodakis, University of Crete, Greece; Gilles Fleury,SUPELEC, France; Nikos Paragios, Ecole Centrale Paris / INRIA Saclay, France
TH-OS1.2: PIECEWISE SMOOTH AFFINE REGISTRATION OF POINT-SETS WITH 528
APPLICATION TO DT-MRI BRAIN FIBER-DATA
Ran Shadmi, Amaldo Mayer, Nir Sochen, Hayit Greenspan, Tel-Aviv University, Israel
TH-OS1.3: PHYSICALLY-BASED DEFORMABLE IMAGE REGISTRATION WITH 532MATERIAL PROPERTY AND BOUNDARY CONDITION ESTIMATION
Huai-Ping Lee, Mark Foskey, Marc Niethammer, Ming Lin, University ofNorth Carolina at Chapel Hill,United States
TH-OS1.4: ACCURATE REGISTRATION OF DYNAMIC CONTRAST-ENHANCED 536
BREAST MRIMAGES WITH ROBUST ESTIMATION AND LINEAR
PROGRAMMING
Yuanjie Zheng, University of Pennsylvania, United States; Andrew Maidment, Hospital ofthe University ofPennsylvania, United States; James Gee, University ofPennsylvania, United States
TH-OS2: BIOLOGICAL IMAGE ANALYSIS
TH-OS2.1: JOINT TRACKING AND LOCOMOTION STATE RECOGNITION OF 540
C.ELEGANS FROM TIME-LAPSE IMAGE SEQUENCESYu Wang, Badrinath Roysam, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, United States
TH-OS2.2: MULTI-TARGET TRACKING OF PACKED YEAST CELLS 544
Ricard Delgado-Gonzalo, Nicolas Denervaud, Sebastian Maerkl, Michael Unser, Ecole Polytechnique Federalede Lausanne (EPFL), Switzerland
TH-OS2.3: TREE2TREE: NEURON SEGMENTATION FOR GENERATION OF 548
NEURONAL MORPHOLOGY
Saurav Basu, AllaAksel, Barry Condron, Scott T. Acton, University of Virginia, United States
xxiii
TH-OS2.4: RESOLVING CLUSTERED WORMS VIA PROBABILISTIC SHAPE 552
MODELS
Carolina Wdhlby, Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard, United States; Tammy Riklin-Raviv, Massachusetts
Institute of Technology, United States; Vebjom Ljosa, Broad Institute ofMIT and Harvard, United States;
Annie L Conery, Massachusetts General Hospital, United States; Polina Golland, Massachusetts Institute of
Technology, United States; Frederick M. Ausubel, Massachusetts General Hospital, United States; Anne E.
Carpenter, Broad Institute ofMIT and Harvard, United States
TH-OS3: LUNG IMAGE SEGMENTATION
TH-OS3.1: INTERACTIVELY LEARNING A PATIENT SPECIFIC K-NEAREST 556
NEIGHBOR CLASSIFIER BASED ON CONFIDENCE WEIGHTED SAMPLES
Eva Marjolein van Rikxoort, Jonathan Goldin, University of California, Los Angeles, United States; Bram van
Ginneken, University Medical Center Utrecht, Netherlands; Maya Galperin-Aizenberg, Chiayi Ni, Matthew
Brown, University of California, Los Angeles, United States
TH-OS3.2: AUTOMATIC SEGMENTATION OF LUNG LOBES IN CT IMAGES BASED 560
ON FISSURES, VESSELS, AND BRONCHI
Bianca Lassen, Jan-Martin Kuhnigk, Ola Friman, Stefan Krass, Heinz-Otto Peitgen, Fraunhofer MEVIS,Germany
TH-OS3.3: INTERACTIVE LUNG SEGMENTATION IN CT SCANS WITH SEVERE 564
ABNORMALITIES
Thessa Kockelkorn, University Medical Center Utrecht, Netherlands; Eva Marjolein van Rikxoort, UniversityofCalifornia, Los Angeles, United States; Jan Grutters, St Antonius Ziekenhuis Nieuwegein, Netherlands; Bramvan Ginneken, Radboud University Nijmegen Medical Centre, Netherlands
TH-OS3.4: AUTOMATIC LEAKAGE DETECTION AND RECOVERY FOR AIRWAY TREE 568
EXTRACTION IN CHEST CT IMAGES
Mario Ceresa, Xabier Artaechevarria, Arrate Munoz-Barrutia, Carlos Ortiz-de-Solorzano, CIMA, Spain
TH-SS1: HIGH-FIELD CLINICAL MRI
TH-SS1.1: IN VIVO MRI OF THE HUMAN TORSO AT 7 TESLA USING 572
MULTI-CHANNEL TRANSMIT
Mark Ladd, Lale Umutlu, Stefan Maderwald, Sonja Kinner, Stephan Orzada, Kai Nassenstein, Irina Brote,Harald Quick, Lena Schaefer, Susanne Ladd, Gerald Antoch, Oliver Krajf, Andreas Bitz, Thomas Lauenstein,University Duisburg-Essen, Germany
TH-SS1.2: HIGH FIELD CLINICAL MRI NEUROIMAGING 573Mark van Buchem, Jeroen van der Grond, Maarten Versluis, Thijs van Osch, Hermien Kan, Wouter Teeuwisse,Andrew Webb, Leiden University Medical Center, Netherlands
TH-SS1.3: CHALLENGES FOR HIGH FIELD CLINICAL MRI 575
Andrew Webb, Leiden University Medical Center, Netherlands
TH-SS1.4: PROTOCOL DEVELOPMENT FOR HIGH FIELD CLINICAL MRI 579
Peter Luijten, University Medical Center Utrecht, Netherlands
xxiv
TH-OS4: CELLULAR AND MOLECULARIMAGE ANALYSIS I
TH-OS4.1: MITOSIS SEQUENCEDETECTION USING HIDDEN CONDITIONAL 580
RANDOM FIELDS
AnanLiu, Carnegie Mellon University, United States / Institute of Computing Technology, Chinese Academy
ofSciences, China / Tianjin University, China; Rang Li, Microsoft Corporation, United States; Takeo Kanade,
Carnegie Mellon University, United States
TH-OS4.2: ENHANCED DETECTION OF CELL PATHS IN SPATIOTEMPORAL PLOTS 584
FOR NONINVASIVE MICROSCOPY OF THE HUMAN RETINA
Johnny Tarn, University of California, Berkeley, and University of California, San Francisco, United States;
Austin Roorda, University of California, Berkeley, United States
TH-OS4.3: ANISOTROPIC PLATE DIFFUSION FILTERING FOR DETECTION OF 588
CELL MEMBRANES IN 3D MICROSCOPY IMAGES
Kishore Mosaliganti, Harvard Medical School, United States; Firdaus Janoos, The Ohio State University,United States; Arnaud Gelas, Ramil Noche, Nik Obholzer, Harvard Medical School, .United States; Raghu
Machiraju, The Ohio State University, United States; Sean Megason, Harvard Medical School, United States
TH-OS4.4: A BOTTOM-UP AND TOP-DOWN MODEL FOR CELL SEGMENTATION 592
USING MULTISPECTRAL DATA
Xuqing Wu, Shishir Shah, University ofHouston, United States
TH-OS5: TOMOGRAPHIC RECONSTRUCTION
TH-OS5.1: OPTIMIZATION TRANSFER APPROACH TO JOINT REGISTRATION / 596
RECONSTRUCTION FOR MOTION-COMPENSATED IMAGE RECONSTRUCTION
Jeffrey Fessler, University ofMichigan, United States
TH-OS5.2: ABOX SPLINE CALCULUS FOR COMPUTED TOMOGRAPHY 600
Alireza Entezari, University of Florida, United States; Michael Unser, Ecole Polytechnique Federale de
Lausanne (EPFL), Switzerland
TH-OS5.3: ITERATIVE REGION OF INTEREST RECONSTRUCTION IN EMISSION 604
TOMOGRAPHY
Jun Ma, Macquarie University, Australia
TH-OS5.4: A WAVELET ALGORITHM FOR ZOOM-IN TOMOGRAPHY 608
Max Longer, Franqoise Peyrin, European Synchrotron Radiation Facility / INSA Lyon, France
TH-OS6: TRACKING AND MOTION ANALYSIS
TH-OS6.1: USING NEEDLE DETECTION AND TRACKING FOR MOTION 612
COMPENSATION INABDOMINAL INTERVENTIONS
Peng Wang, Pfister Marcus, Terrence Chen, Dorin Comaniciu, Siemens, United States
TH-OS6.2: SHAPE AND MOTION ANALYSIS OF LEFT VENTRICLE 616DYSSYNCHRONY FROM REAL-TIME 3D ECHOCARDIOGRAPHY
Honghai Zhang, Ademola Abiose, Dwayne Campbell, Milan Sonka, James Martins, Andreas Wahle, UniversityofIowa, United States
XXV
TH-OS6.3: REAL TIME TRACKING OF 3D ORGAN SURFACES USING SINGLE MR 620
IMAGE AND LIMITED OPTICAL VIEWING
Dan Wang, Ahmed Tewfik, University ofMinnesota, United States
TH-OS6.4: NEEDLE TRACKING THROUGH HIGHER-ORDER MRF OPTIMIZATION 624
T. Hauke Heibel, Ben Glocker, Nassir Navab, Technische Universitdt Munchen, Germany; Nikos Paragios,
Ecole Centrale Paris, France
TH-SS2: DIFFUSION AND FUNCTIONAL MRI
TH-SS2.1: THEORY AND APPLICATIONS OF DIFFUSION MRI 628
Alexander Leemans, Image Sciences Institute, University Medical Center Utrecht, Netherlands
TH-SS2.2: TOWARDS AN INTEGRATED ANALYSIS OF ANATOMICAL AND FUNCTIONAL ....632
CONNECTIVITY
Marc Tittgemeyer, Max-Planck-Institute for Neurological Research, Germany
TH-SS2.3: CHALLENGES IN MR IMAGE ACQUISITION AND ANALYSIS FOR 633
PROBING THE HUMAN CONNECTOME IN VIVO
Anastasia Yendiki, Harvard Medical School / Massachusetts General Hospital, United States
TH-SS2.4: CONNECTIVITY CONCEPTS IN DIFFUSION AND FUNCTIONAL MRI 635
Carl-Fredrik Westin, Harvard Medical School and Brigham and Women's Hospital, United States
TH-OS10: CANCER IMAGING AND ANALYSIS
TH-OS10.1: COMPUTER-AIDED GLEASON GRADING OF PROSTATE CANCER 636
HISTOPATHOLOGICAL IMAGES USING TEXTON FORESTS
Parmeshwar Khurd, Claus Bahlmann, Peter Maday, Ali Kamen, Siemens Corporate Research, United States;
Summer Gibbs-Strauss, Elizabeth M. Genega, John V. Frangioni, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center,
United States
TH-OS10.2: MR PRIORBASED AUTOMATIC SEGMENTATION OF THE PROSTATE IN 640
TRUS IMAGES FOR MR/TRUS DATA FUSION
Sebastien Martin, Michael Baumann, Universite J.Fourier, France; Vincent Daanen, KOELIS, France;
Jocelyne Troccaz, Universite J.Fourier, France
TH-OS10.3: IMPROVED PROSTATE CANCER LOCALIZATION WITH SPATIALLY 644
REGULARIZED DYNAMIC CONTRAST-ENHANCED MAGNETIC RESONANCE
IMAGING
Liu Lukai, Illinois Institute of Technology, United States; MasoomA. Haider, Mount Sinai Hospital, Canada;
Deanne L. Langer, University of Toronto, Canada; Imam Samil Yetik, Illinois Institute of Technology, United
States
TH-OS10.4: SEMI-SUPERVISED PROSTATE CANCER SEGMENTATION WITH 648
MULTISPECTRAL MRI
YusufArtan, Illinois Institute of Technology, United States; Masoom A. Haider, Mount Sinai Hospital,
University Health Network, Canada; Deanne L. Langer, University of Toronto, Canada; Imam Samil Yetik,
Illinois Institute of Technology, United States
xxvi
TH-OS7: FUNCTIONAL MRI AND ANALYSIS
TH-OS7.1: CONDITIONAL INTEGRATION AS A WAY OF MEASURING MEDIATED 652
INTERACTIONS BETWEEN LARGE-SCALE BRAIN NETWORKS IN FUNCTIONAL
MRI
David Coynel, Guillaume Marrelec, Vincent Perlbarg, Inserm and UPMC Univ Paris 06, France; Julien
Doyon, University ofMontreal, Canada; Habib Benali, Inserm and UPMC Univ Paris 06, France
TH-OS7.2: CORTICAL SURFACE BASED IDENTIFICATION OF BRAIN NETWORKS 656
USING HIGH SPATIAL RESOLUTION RESTING STATE FMRI DATA
Kaiming Li, Northwestern Polytechnical University, China / University of Georgia, United States; Lei Guo,
Gang Li, Jingxin Nie, Northwestern Polytechnical University, China; Carlos Faraco, Qun Zhao, Stephen
Miller, Tianming Liu, University of Georgia, United States
TH-OS7.3: STATISTICAL PARAMETRIC MAPPING OF FMRI DATA USING SPARSE 660
DICTIONARY LEARNING
Kangjoo Lee, Jong Chul Ye, Korea Advanced Institute ofScience and Technology, Republic ofKorea
TH-OS7.4: HIGH-ORDER CONCEPT DISCOVERY IN FUNCTIONAL BRAIN IMAGING 664
Michael Barnathan, Vasileios Megalooikonomou, Temple University, United States; Christos Faloutsos,
Carnegie Mellon University, United States; Feroze Mohamed, Scott Faro, Temple University School of
Medicine, United States
TH-OS8: VASCULAR IMAGE SEGMENTATION
TH-OS8.1: AUTOMATIC SEGMENTATION OF PULMONARY VASCULATURE IN 668
THORACIC CT SCANS WITH LOCAL THRESHOLDING AND AIRWAY WALL
REMOVAL
Evelien van Dongen, Image Sciences Institute, University Medical Center Utrecht, Netherlands; Brain van
Ginneken, Radboud University Nijmegen Medical Centre, Netherlands
TH-OS8.2: AN ITERATIVE MODEL-CONSTRAINED GRAPH-CUT ALGORITHM FOR 672
ABDOMINAL AORTIC ANEURYSM THROMBUS SEGMENTATION
Moti Freiman, The Hebrew University ofJerusalem, Israel; Steven Esses, Hadassah Hebrew UniversityMedical Center, Israel; Leo Joskowicz, The Hebrew University ofJerusalem, Israel; Jacob Sosna, Hadassah
Hebrew University Medical Center, Israel
TH-OS8.3: VESSEL SEGMENTATION IN EYE FUNDUS IMAGES USING ENSEMBLE 676
LEARNING AND CURVE FITTING
Elco Oost, Yuki Akatsuka, Akinobu Shimizu, Hidefumi Kobatake, Tokyo University ofAgriculture and
Technology, Japan; Daisuke Furukawa, Akihiro Katayama, Canon, Inc., Japan
TH-OS8.4: VESSEL TREE EXTRACTION USING LOCALLY OPTIMAL PATHS 680
Pechin Lo, Marleen de Bruijne, University of Copenhagen, Denmark; Bram van Ginneken, University Medical
Center Utrecht, Netherlands
TH-OS9: OPTICAL IMAGING
TH-OS9.1: COMPRESSED SENSING FOR DIGITAL HOLOGRAPHIC MICROSCOPY 684
Marcio de Moraes Marim, Institut Pasteur, France; Michael Atlan, ESPCI ParisTech, France; Elsa D.
Angelini, Telecom ParisTech, France; Jean-Christophe Olivo-Marin, Institut Pasteur, France
xxvii
TH-OS9.2: BIOLUMINESCENCE ENHANCEMENT THROUGH FUSION OF OPTICAL 688
IMAGING AND CINEMATIC VIDEO FLOW
Mickael Savinaud, Ecole Centrale Paris /INRIA GALEN / Biospace Lab, France; Aristeidis Sotiras, Ecole
Centrale Paris/INRIA GALEN, France; Serge Maitrejean, Biospace Lab, France; Nikos Paragios, Ecole
Centrale Paris/INRIA GALEN, France
TH-OS9.3: APRIORI GUIDED RECONSTRUCTION FOR FDOT USING MIXED 692
NORMS
Jean-Charles Baritaux, Michael Unser, Swiss institute of technology ofLausanne, Switzerland
TH-OS9.4: FAST LOCALIZE THE BIOLUMINESCENT SOURCE VIA GRAPH CUTS 696
Kai Liu, Jie Tian, Shouping Zhu, Chenghu Qin, Xing Zhang, Dong Han, Institute ofAutomation, Chinese
Academy of Sciences, China
xxviii