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Author |
Aura Hernandez-Sabate; Debora Gil; Albert Teis |
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Title |
How Do Conservation Laws Define a Motion Suppression Score in In-Vivo Ivus Sequences? |
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Conference Article |
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2007 |
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Proc. IEEE Ultrasonics Symp |
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2231-2234 |
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validation standards; IVUS motion compensation; conservation laws. |
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Evaluation of arterial tissue biomechanics for diagnosis and treatment of cardiovascular diseases is an active research field in the biomedical imaging processing area. IntraVascular UltraSound (IVUS) is a unique tool for such assessment since it reflects tissue morphology and deformation. A proper quantification and visualization of both properties is hindered by vessel structures misalignments introduced by cardiac dynamics. This has encouraged development of IVUS motion compensation techniques. However, there is a lack of an objective evaluation of motion reduction ensuring a reliable clinical application This work reports a novel score, the Conservation of Density Rate (CDR), for validation of motion compensation in in-vivo pullbacks. Synthetic experiments validate the proposed score as measure of motion parameters accuracy; while results in in vivo pullbacks show its reliability in clinical cases. |
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IAM |
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IAM @ iam @ HTG2007 |
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1550 |
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Author |
Ferran Poveda; Enric Marti; Debora Gil; Francesc Carreras; Manel Ballester |
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Title |
Helical Structure of Ventricular Anatomy by Diffusion Tensor Cardiac MR Tractography |
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Journal Article |
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2012 |
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Journal of American College of Cardiology |
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JACC |
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5 |
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7 |
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754-755 |
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It is widely accepted that myocardial fiber architecture plays a critical role in myocardial contractility and relaxation (1). However, there is a lack of consensus about the distribution of the myocardial fibers and their spatial arrangement in the left and right ventricles. An understanding of the cardiac architecture should benefit the ventricular functional assessment, left ventricular reconstructive surgery planning, or resynchronization therapy in heart failure. Researchers have proposed several conceptual models to describe the architecture of the heart, ranging from gross dissection to histological presentation. The cardiac mesh model (2) proposes that the myocytes are arranged longitudinally and radially change their angulation along the myocardial depth. By contrast, the helical ventricular myocardial model states that the ventricular myocardium is a continuous anatomical helical layout of myocardial fibers (1 |
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1936-878X |
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IAM @ iam @ PMG2012 |
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1985 |
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Author |
Ferran Poveda; Debora Gil; Enric Marti; Albert Andaluz; Manel Ballester;Francesc Carreras Costa |
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Title |
Helical structure of the cardiac ventricular anatomy assessed by Diffusion Tensor Magnetic Resonance Imaging multi-resolution tractography |
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Journal Article |
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Year |
2013 |
Publication |
Revista Española de Cardiología |
Abbreviated Journal |
REC |
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66 |
Issue |
10 |
Pages |
782-790 |
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Heart;Diffusion magnetic resonance imaging;Diffusion tractography;Helical heart;Myocardial ventricular band. |
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Deep understanding of myocardial structure linking morphology and function of the heart would unravel crucial knowledge for medical and surgical clinical procedures and studies. Several conceptual models of myocardial fiber organization have been proposed but the lack of an automatic and objective methodology prevented an agreement. We sought to deepen in this knowledge through advanced computer graphic representations of the myocardial fiber architecture by diffusion tensor magnetic resonance imaging (DT-MRI).
We performed automatic tractography reconstruction of unsegmented DT-MRI canine heart datasets coming from the public database of the Johns Hopkins University. Full scale tractographies have been build with 200 seeds and are composed by streamlines computed on the vectorial field of primary eigenvectors given at the diffusion tensor volumes. Also, we introduced a novel multi-scale visualization technique in order to obtain a simplified tractography. This methodology allowed to keep the main geometric features of the fiber tracts, making easier to decipher the main properties of the architectural organization of the heart.
On the analysis of the output from our tractographic representations we found exact correlation with low-level details of myocardial architecture, but also with the more abstract conceptualization of a continuous helical ventricular myocardial fiber array.
Objective analysis of myocardial architecture by an automated method, including the entire myocardium and using several 3D levels of complexity, reveals a continuous helical myocardial fiber arrangement of both right and left ventricles, supporting the anatomical model of the helical ventricular myocardial band described by Torrent-Guasp. |
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Elsevier |
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IAM; 600.044; 600.060 |
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IAM @ iam @ PGM2013 |
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2194 |
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Author |
Sergio Vera; Debora Gil; Agnes Borras; Marius George Linguraru; Miguel Angel Gonzalez Ballester |
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Title |
Geometric Steerable Medial Maps |
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Journal Article |
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Year |
2013 |
Publication |
Machine Vision and Applications |
Abbreviated Journal |
MVA |
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24 |
Issue |
6 |
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1255-1266 |
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Medial Representations ,Medial Manifolds Comparation , Surface , Reconstruction |
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In order to provide more intuitive and easily interpretable representations of complex shapes/organs, medial manifolds should reach a compromise between simplicity in geometry and capability for restoring the anatomy/shape of the organ/volume. Existing morphological methods show excellent results when applied to 2D objects, but their quality drops across dimensions.
This paper contributes to the computation of medial manifolds in two aspects. First, we provide a standard scheme for the computation of medial manifolds that avoids degenerated medial axis segments. Second, we introduce a continuous operator for accurate and efficient computation of medial structures of arbitrary dimension. We evaluate quantitatively the performance of our method with respect to existing approaches, by applying them to syn- thetic shapes of known medial geometry. We also show its higher performance for medical imaging applications in terms of simplicity of medial structures and capability for reconstructing the anatomical volume. |
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Springer Berlin Heidelberg |
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Mubarak Shah |
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0932-8092 |
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IAM; 605.203; 600.060; 600.044 |
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IAM @ iam @ VGB2013 |
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2192 |
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Author |
Debora Gil |
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Title |
Geometric Differential Operators for Shape Modelling |
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Book Whole |
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Year |
2004 |
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PhD Thesis, Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona-CVC |
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Medical imaging feeds research in many computer vision and image processing fields: image filtering, segmentation, shape recovery, registration, retrieval and pattern matching. Because of their low contrast changes and large variety of artifacts and noise, medical imaging processing techniques relying on an analysis of the geometry of image level sets rather than on intensity values result in more robust treatment. From the starting point of treatment of intravascular images, this PhD thesis ad- dresses the design of differential image operators based on geometric principles for a robust shape modelling and restoration. Among all fields applying shape recovery, we approach filtering and segmentation of image objects. For a successful use in real images, the segmentation process should go through three stages: noise removing, shape modelling and shape recovery. This PhD addresses all three topics, but for the sake of algorithms as automated as possible, techniques for image processing will be designed to satisfy three main principles: a) convergence of the iterative schemes to non-trivial states avoiding image degeneration to a constant image and representing smooth models of the originals; b) smooth asymptotic behav- ior ensuring stabilization of the iterative process; c) fixed parameter values ensuring equal (domain free) performance of the algorithms whatever initial images/shapes. Our geometric approach to the generic equations that model the different processes approached enables defining techniques satisfying all the former requirements. First, we introduce a new curvature-based geometric flow for image filtering achieving a good compromise between noise removing and resemblance to original images. Sec- ond, we describe a new family of diffusion operators that restrict their scope to image level curves and serve to restore smooth closed models from unconnected sets of points. Finally, we design a regularization of snake (distance) maps that ensures its smooth convergence towards any closed shape. Experiments show that performance of the techniques proposed overpasses that of state-of-the-art algorithms. |
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Ph.D. thesis |
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Ediciones Graficas Rey |
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Barcelona (Spain) |
Editor |
Jordi Saludes i Closa;Petia Radeva |
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84-933652-0-3 |
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prit |
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IAM; |
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IAM @ iam @ GIL2004 |
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1517 |
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Author |
Oriol Pujol; Debora Gil; Petia Radeva |
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Title |
Fundamentals of Stop and Go active models |
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Journal Article |
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Year |
2005 |
Publication |
Image and Vision Computing |
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23 |
Issue |
8 |
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681-691 |
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Deformable models; Geodesic snakes; Region-based segmentation |
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An efficient snake formulation should conform to the idea of picking the smoothest curve among all the shapes approximating an object of interest. In current geodesic snakes, the regularizing curvature also affects the convergence stage, hindering the latter at concave regions. In the present work, we make use of characteristic functions to define a novel geodesic formulation that decouples regularity and convergence. This term decoupling endows the snake with higher adaptability to non-convex shapes. Convergence is ensured by splitting the definition of the external force into an attractive vector field and a repulsive one. In our paper, we propose to use likelihood maps as approximation of characteristic functions of object appearance. The better efficiency and accuracy of our decoupled scheme are illustrated in the particular case of feature space-based segmentation. |
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Butterworth-Heinemann |
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Newton, MA, USA |
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0262-8856 |
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IAM;MILAB;HuPBA |
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IAM @ iam @ PGR2005 |
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1629 |
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Author |
H. Martin Kjer; Jens Fagertuna; Sergio Vera; Debora Gil; Miguel Angel Gonzalez Ballester; Rasmus R. Paulsena |
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Title |
Free-form image registration of human cochlear uCT data using skeleton similarity as anatomical prior |
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Journal Article |
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2016 |
Publication |
Patter Recognition Letters |
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PRL |
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76 |
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1 |
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76-82 |
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IAM; 600.060 |
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Admin @ si @ MFV2017b |
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2941 |
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Author |
Joan M. Nuñez; Debora Gil; Fernando Vilariño |
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Title |
Finger joint characterization from X-ray images for rheymatoid arthritis assessment |
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Conference Article |
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2013 |
Publication |
6th International Conference on Biomedical Electronics and Devices |
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288-292 |
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Rheumatoid Arthritis; X-Ray; Hand Joint; Sclerosis; Sharp Van der Heijde |
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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. |
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Barcelona; February 2013 |
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SciTePress |
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800 |
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BIODEVICES |
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IAM;MV; 600.057; 600.054;SIAI |
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Call Number |
IAM @ iam @ NGV2013 |
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2196 |
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Author |
Patricia Marquez; H. Kause; A. Fuster; Aura Hernandez-Sabate; L. Florack; Debora Gil; Hans van Assen |
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Title |
Factors Affecting Optical Flow Performance in Tagging Magnetic Resonance Imaging |
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Conference Article |
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Year |
2014 |
Publication |
17th International Conference on Medical Image Computing and Computer Assisted Intervention |
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8896 |
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231-238 |
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Optical flow; Performance Evaluation; Synthetic Database; ANOVA; Tagging Magnetic Resonance Imaging |
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Changes in cardiac deformation patterns are correlated with cardiac pathologies. Deformation can be extracted from tagging Magnetic Resonance Imaging (tMRI) using Optical Flow (OF) techniques. For applications of OF in a clinical setting it is important to assess to what extent the performance of a particular OF method is stable across dierent clinical acquisition artifacts. This paper presents a statistical validation framework, based on ANOVA, to assess the motion and appearance factors that have the largest in uence on OF accuracy drop.
In order to validate this framework, we created a database of simulated tMRI data including the most common artifacts of MRI and test three dierent OF methods, including HARP. |
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Boston; USA; September 2014 |
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Springer International Publishing |
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0302-9743 |
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978-3-319-14677-5 |
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STACOM |
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IAM; ADAS; 600.060; 601.145; 600.076; 600.075 |
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Admin @ si @ MKF2014 |
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2495 |
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Author |
Debora Gil; Petia Radeva |
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Title |
Extending anisotropic operators to recover smooth shapes |
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Journal Article |
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Year |
2005 |
Publication |
Computer Vision and Image Understanding |
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99 |
Issue |
1 |
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110-125 |
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Contour completion; Functional extension; Differential operators; Riemmanian manifolds; Snake segmentation |
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Anisotropic differential operators are widely used in image enhancement processes. Recently, their property of smoothly extending functions to the whole image domain has begun to be exploited. Strong ellipticity of differential operators is a requirement that ensures existence of a unique solution. This condition is too restrictive for operators designed to extend image level sets: their own functionality implies that they should restrict to some vector field. The diffusion tensor that defines the diffusion operator links anisotropic processes with Riemmanian manifolds. In this context, degeneracy implies restricting diffusion to the varieties generated by the vector fields of positive eigenvalues, provided that an integrability condition is satisfied. We will use that any smooth vector field fulfills this integrability requirement to design line connection algorithms for contour completion. As application we present a segmenting strategy that assures convergent snakes whatever the geometry of the object to be modelled is. |
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1077-3142 |
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IAM;MILAB |
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IAM @ iam @ GIR2005 |
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1530 |
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