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Carles Sanchez, Debora Gil, Antoni Rosell, Albert Andaluz, & F. Javier Sanchez. (2013). Segmentation of Tracheal Rings in Videobronchoscopy combining Geometry and Appearance. In Sebastiano Battiato and José Braz (Ed.), Proceedings of the International Conference on Computer Vision Theory and Applications (Vol. 1, pp. 153–161). LNCS. Portugal: SciTePress.
Abstract: Videobronchoscopy is a medical imaging technique that allows interactive navigation inside the respiratory pathways and minimal invasive interventions. Tracheal procedures are ordinary interventions that require measurement of the percentage of obstructed pathway for injury (stenosis) assessment. Visual assessment of stenosis in videobronchoscopic sequences requires high expertise of trachea anatomy and is prone to human error. Accurate detection of tracheal rings is the basis for automated estimation of the size of stenosed trachea. Processing of videobronchoscopic images acquired at the operating room is a challenging task due to the wide range of artifacts and acquisition conditions. We present a model of the geometric-appearance of tracheal rings for its detection in videobronchoscopic videos. Experiments on sequences acquired at the operating room, show a performance close to inter-observer variability
Keywords: Video-bronchoscopy, tracheal ring segmentation, trachea geometric and appearance model
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Joan M. Nuñez, Debora Gil, & Fernando Vilariño. (2013). Finger joint characterization from X-ray images for rheymatoid arthritis assessment. In 6th International Conference on Biomedical Electronics and Devices (pp. 288–292). SciTePress.
Abstract: In this study we propose amodular systemfor automatic rheumatoid arthritis assessment which provides a joint space width measure. A hand joint model is proposed based on the accurate analysis of a X-ray finger joint image sample set. This model shows that the sclerosis and the lower bone are the main necessary features in order to perform a proper finger joint characterization. We propose sclerosis and lower bone detection methods as well as the experimental setup necessary for its performance assessment. Our characterization is used to propose and compute a joint space width score which is shown to be related to the different degrees of arthritis. This assertion is verified by comparing our proposed score with Sharp Van der Heijde score, confirming that the lower our score is the more advanced is the patient affection.
Keywords: Rheumatoid Arthritis; X-Ray; Hand Joint; Sclerosis; Sharp Van der Heijde
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Joan M. Nuñez, Jorge Bernal, F. Javier Sanchez, & Fernando Vilariño. (2013). Blood Vessel Characterization in Colonoscopy Images to Improve Polyp Localization. In Proceedings of the International Conference on Computer Vision Theory and Applications (Vol. 1, pp. 162–171). SciTePress.
Abstract: This paper presents an approach to mitigate the contribution of blood vessels to the energy image used at different tasks of automatic colonoscopy image analysis. This goal is achieved by introducing a characterization of endoluminal scene objects which allows us to differentiate between the trace of 2-dimensional visual objects,such as vessels, and shades from 3-dimensional visual objects, such as folds. The proposed characterization is based on the influence that the object shape has in the resulting visual feature, and it leads to the development of a blood vessel attenuation algorithm. A database consisting of manually labelled masks was built in order to test the performance of our method, which shows an encouraging success in blood vessel mitigation while keeping other structures intact. Moreover, by extending our method to the only available polyp localization
algorithm tested on a public database, blood vessel mitigation proved to have a positive influence on the overall performance.
Keywords: Colonoscopy; Blood vessel; Linear features; Valley detection
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F. de la Torre, Jordi Vitria, Petia Radeva, & J. Melenchon. (2000). EigenFiltering for flexible Eigentracking. In 15 th International Conference on Pattern Recognition (Vol. 3, pp. 1118–1121).
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C. Sbert, & A.F. Sole. (2000). Stereo reconstruction of 3D curves. In 15 th International Conference on Pattern Recognition (Vol. 1, 912–915).
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J.M. Sanchez, & X. Binefa. (2000). Color Normalization for Appearance Based Recognition of Video Key-frames. In 15 th International Conference on Pattern Recognition (Vol. 1, pp. 815–818).
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Robert Benavente, Gemma Sanchez, Ramon Baldrich, Maria Vanrell, & Josep Llados. (2000). Normalized colour segmentation for human appearance description. In 15 th International Conference on Pattern Recognition (Vol. 3, pp. 637–641).
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X. Orriols, Ricardo Toledo, X. Binefa, Petia Radeva, Jordi Vitria, & Juan J. Villanueva. (2000). Probabilistic Saliency Approach for Elongated Structure Detection using Deformable Models. In 15 th International Conference on Pattern Recognition (Vol. 3, pp. 1006–1009).
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J. Garcia, J.M. Sanchez, X. Orriols, & X. Binefa. (2000). Chromatic aberration and depth extraction. In 15 th International Conference on Pattern Recognition (Vol. 1, pp. 762–765).
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A. Pujol, Juan J. Villanueva, & H. Wechsler. (2000). Automatic View Based Caricaturing. In 15 th International Conference on Pattern Recognition (Vol. 1, pp. 1072–1075).
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Javier Varona, Jordi Gonzalez, Xavier Roca, & Juan J. Villanueva. (2000). iTrack: Image-based Probabilistic Tracking of People. In 15 th International Conference on Pattern Recognition (Vol. 3, pp. 1122–1125).
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David Guillamet, & Jordi Vitria. (2000). A Comparison of Local versus Global Color Histograms for Object Recognition. In 15 th International Conference on Pattern Recognition (Vol. 2, pp. 422–425).
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V. Valev, B. Sankur, & Petia Radeva. (2000). Generalized Non Reducible Descriptors. In 15 th International Conference on Pattern Recognition (Vol. 2, p. 397).
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David Lloret, Joan Serrat, Antonio Lopez, A. Soler, & Juan J. Villanueva. (2000). Retinal image registration using creases as anatomical landmarks. In 15 th International Conference on Pattern Recognition (Vol. 3, pp. 207–2010).
Abstract: Retinal images are routinely used in ophthalmology to study the optical nerve head and the retina. To assess objectively the evolution of an illness, images taken at different times must be registered. Most methods so far have been designed specifically for a single image modality, like temporal series or stereo pairs of angiographies, fluorescein angiographies or scanning laser ophthalmoscope (SLO) images, which makes them prone to fail when conditions vary. In contrast, the method we propose has shown to be accurate and reliable on all the former modalities. It has been adapted from the 3D registration of CT and MR image to 2D. Relevant features (also known as landmarks) are extracted by means of a robust creaseness operator, and resulting images are iteratively transformed until a maximum in their correlation is achieved. Our method has succeeded in more than 100 pairs tried so far, in all cases including also the scaling as a parameter to be optimized
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Xose M. Pardo, & Petia Radeva. (2000). Discriminant snakes for 3D reconstruction in medical Images. In 15 th International Conference on Pattern Recognition (Vol. 4, pp. 336–339).
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