DocumentCode
1123000
Title
Knowledge-Driven Ultrasonic Three-Dimensional Organ Modeling
Author
Brinkley, James F.
Author_Institution
Department of Computer Science, Knowledge Systems Laboratory, Stanford University, Palo Alto, CA 94304.
Issue
4
fYear
1985
fDate
7/1/1985 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
431
Lastpage
441
Abstract
A representation is described for nonstructured biologic objects which are single-valued distortions of a sphere. The representation is implemented in a model-driven system for extracting three-dimensional (3-D) organ reconstructions from a series of arbitrarily oriented ultrasound slices. A training set of ultrasonic reconstructions of similarly shaped objects is used to give the computer generic knowledge of a given shape class. This knowledge is in the form of local slope constraints defined on an object coordinate system. The combination of constraints, interacting together via a relaxation process on continuous label sets, attempts to capture the essential shape and range of variation for an organ class. An initial tolerance region and ``bestguess´´ organ surface are established by the interaction of the learned shape knowledge with manually input organ landmarks. A hypothesize-verify paradigm is employed to alternately request new data and to update the tolerance region and bestguess surface. Examples from runs on two balloon classes are presented. These examples show: 1) the local constraints interact to produce a reasonable global depiction of the essential shape and range of variation, 2) the use of shape knowledge permits accurate results from only one third of the available data, and 3) the 3-D shape knowledge provides a two-dimensional (2-D) tolerance region for plan-guided edge detection.
Keywords
Biological system modeling; Biomedical imaging; Computed tomography; Computer vision; Image edge detection; Image reconstruction; Nuclear magnetic resonance; Shape; Two dimensional displays; Ultrasonic imaging; Artificial intelligence; computer vision; medical imaging; organ volume; shape representation; three-dimensional organ modeling; ultrasound;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Pattern Analysis and Machine Intelligence, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0162-8828
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TPAMI.1985.4767682
Filename
4767682
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