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Patricia Marquez. (2015)." A Confidence Framework for the Assessment of Optical Flow Performance" (Debora Gil, & Aura Hernandez, Eds.). Ph.D. thesis, Ediciones Graficas Rey, .
Abstract: Optical Flow (OF) is the input of a wide range of decision support systems such as car driver assistance, UAV guiding or medical diagnose. In these real situations, the absence of ground truth forces to assess OF quality using quantities computed from either sequences or the computed optical flow itself. These quantities are generally known as Confidence Measures, CM. Even if we have a proper confidence measure we still need a way to evaluate its ability to discard pixels with an OF prone to have a large error. Current approaches only provide a descriptive evaluation of the CM performance but such approaches are not capable to fairly compare different confidence measures and optical flow algorithms. Thus, it is of prime importance to define a framework and a general road map for the evaluation of optical flow performance.
This thesis provides a framework able to decide which pairs “ optical flow – confidence measure” (OF-CM) are best suited for optical flow error bounding given a confidence level determined by a decision support system. To design this framework we cover the following points:
Descriptive scores. As a first step, we summarize and analyze the sources of inaccuracies in the output of optical flow algorithms. Second, we present several descriptive plots that visually assess CM capabilities for OF error bounding. In addition to the descriptive plots, given a plot representing OF-CM capabilities to bound the error, we provide a numeric score that categorizes the plot according to its decreasing profile, that is, a score assessing CM performance.
Statistical framework. We provide a comparison framework that assesses the best suited OF-CM pair for error bounding that uses a two stage cascade process. First of all we assess the predictive value of the confidence measures by means of a descriptive plot. Then, for a sample of descriptive plots computed over training frames, we obtain a generic curve that will be used for sequences with no ground truth. As a second step, we evaluate the obtained general curve and its capabilities to really reflect the predictive value of a confidence measure using the variability across train frames by means of ANOVA.
The presented framework has shown its potential in the application on clinical decision support systems. In particular, we have analyzed the impact of the different image artifacts such as noise and decay to the output of optical flow in a cardiac diagnose system and we have improved the navigation inside the bronchial tree on bronchoscopy.
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Sergio Vera. (2015)." Anatomic Registration based on Medial Axis Parametrizations" (Debora Gil, & Miguel Angel Gonzalez Ballester, Eds.). Ph.D. thesis, Ediciones Graficas Rey, .
Abstract: Image registration has been for many years the gold standard method to bring two images into correspondence. It has been used extensively in the eld of medical imaging in order to put images of dierent patients into a common overlapping spatial position. However, medical image registration is a slow, iterative optimization process, where many variables and prone to fall into the pit traps local minima.
A coordinate system parameterizing the interior of organs is a powerful tool for a systematic localization of injured tissue. If the same coordinate values are assigned to specic anatomical sites, parameterizations ensure integration of data across different medical image modalities. Harmonic mappings have been used to produce parametric meshes over the surface of anatomical shapes, given their ability to set values at specic locations through boundary conditions. However, most of the existing implementations in medical imaging restrict to either anatomical surfaces, or the depth coordinate with boundary conditions is given at discrete sites of limited geometric diversity.
The medial surface of the shape can be used to provide a continuous basis for the denition of a depth coordinate. However, given that dierent methods for generation of medial surfaces generate dierent manifolds, not all of them are equally suited to be the basis of radial coordinate for a parameterization. It would be desirable that the medial surface will be smooth, and robust to surface shape noise, with low number of spurious branches or surfaces.
In this thesis we present methods for computation of smooth medial manifolds and apply them to the generation of for anatomical volumetric parameterization that extends current harmonic parameterizations to the interior anatomy using information provided by the volume medial surface. This reference system sets a solid base for creating anatomical models of the anatomical shapes, and allows comparing several patients in a common framework of reference.
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Gloria Fernandez Esparrach, Jorge Bernal, Cristina Rodriguez de Miguel, Debora Gil, Fernando Vilariño, Henry Cordova, et al. (2015). "Colonic polyps are correctly identified by a computer vision method using wm-dova energy maps " In Proceedings of 23 United European- UEG Week 2015.
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Debora Gil, Sergio Vera, Agnes Borras, Albert Andaluz, & Miguel Angel Gonzalez Ballester. (2017). "Anatomical Medial Surfaces with Efficient Resolution of Branches Singularities " . Medical Image Analysis, 35, 390–402.
Abstract: Medial surfaces are powerful tools for shape description, but their use has been limited due to the sensibility existing methods to branching artifacts. Medial branching artifacts are associated to perturbations of the object boundary rather than to geometric features. Such instability is a main obstacle for a condent application in shape recognition and description. Medial branches correspond to singularities of the medial surface and, thus, they are problematic for existing morphological and energy-based algorithms. In this paper, we use algebraic geometry concepts in an energy-based approach to compute a medial surface presenting a stable branching topology. We also present an ecient GPU-CPU implementation using standard image processing tools. We show the method computational eciency and quality on a custom made synthetic database. Finally, we present some results on a medical imaging application for localization of abdominal pathologies.
Keywords: Medial Representations; Shape Recognition; Medial Branching Stability ; Singular Points
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Gloria Fernandez Esparrach, Jorge Bernal, Cristina Rodriguez de Miguel, Debora Gil, Fernando Vilariño, Henry Cordova, et al. (2016)." Utilidad de la visión por computador para la localización de pólipos pequeños y planos" In XIX Reunión Nacional de la Asociación Española de Gastroenterología, Gastroenterology Hepatology (Vol. 39, 94).
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Antonio Esteban Lansaque, Carles Sanchez, Agnes Borras, Marta Diez-Ferrer, Antoni Rosell, & Debora Gil. (2016). "Stable Airway Center Tracking for Bronchoscopic Navigation " In 28th Conference of the international Society for Medical Innovation and Technology.
Abstract: Bronchoscopists use X‐ray fluoroscopy to guide bronchoscopes to the lesion to be biopsied without any kind of incisions. Reducing exposure to X‐ray is important for both patients and doctors but alternatives like electromagnetic navigation require specific equipment and increase the cost of the clinical procedure. We propose a guiding system based on the extraction of airway centers from intra‐operative videos. Such anatomical landmarks could be
matched to the airway centerline extracted from a pre‐planned CT to indicate the best path to the lesion. We present an extraction of lumen centers
from intra‐operative videos based on tracking of maximal stable regions of energy maps.
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Antonio Esteban Lansaque, Carles Sanchez, Agnes Borras, Marta Diez-Ferrer, Antoni Rosell, & Debora Gil. (2016). "Stable Anatomical Structure Tracking for video-bronchoscopy Navigation " In 19th International Conference on Medical Image Computing and Computer Assisted Intervention Workshops.
Abstract: Bronchoscopy allows to examine the patient airways for detection of lesions and sampling of tissues without surgery. A main drawback in lung cancer diagnosis is the diculty to check whether the exploration is following the correct path to the nodule that has to be biopsied. The most extended guidance uses uoroscopy which implies repeated radiation of clinical sta and patients. Alternatives such as virtual bronchoscopy or electromagnetic navigation are very expensive and not completely robust to blood, mocus or deformations as to be extensively used. We propose a method that extracts and tracks stable lumen regions at dierent levels of the bronchial tree. The tracked regions are stored in a tree that encodes the anatomical structure of the scene which can be useful to retrieve the path to the lesion that the clinician should follow to do the biopsy. We present a multi-expert validation of our anatomical landmark extraction in 3 intra-operative ultrathin explorations.
Keywords: Lung cancer diagnosis; video-bronchoscopy; airway lumen detection; region tracking
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Marta Diez-Ferrer, Debora Gil, Elena Carreño, Susana Padrones, & Samantha Aso. (2017). Positive Airway Pressure-Enhanced CT to Improve Virtual Bronchoscopic Navigation . Journal of Thoracic Oncology, 12(1S), S596–S597.
Abstract: A main weakness of virtual bronchoscopic navigation (VBN) is unsuccessful segmentation of distal branches approaching peripheral pulmonary nodules (PPN). CT scan acquisition protocol is pivotal for segmentation covering the utmost periphery. We hypothesize that application of continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) during CT acquisition could improve visualization and segmentation of peripheral bronchi. The purpose of the present pilot study is to compare quality of segmentations under 4 CT acquisition modes: inspiration (INSP), expiration (EXP) and both with CPAP (INSP-CPAP and EXP-CPAP).
Keywords: Thorax CT; diagnosis; Peripheral Pulmonary Nodule
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H.Martin Kjer, Jens Fagertuna, Sergio Vera, Debora Gil, Miguel Angel Gonzalez Ballester, & Rasmus R. Paulsena. (2016). "Free-form image registration of human cochlear uCT data using skeleton similarity as anatomical prior " . Patter Recognition Letters, 76(1), 76–82.
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H. Martin, Jens Fagertun, Sergio Vera, & Debora Gil. (2017). "Medial structure generation for registration of anatomical structures " In Skeletonization, Theory, Methods and Applications (Vol. 11).
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