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Computer Vision Approaches to Medical Image Analysis

Second International ECCV Workshop, CVAMIA 2006, Graz, Austria, May 12, 2006, Revised Papers

  • Conference proceedings
  • © 2006

Overview

Part of the book series: Lecture Notes in Computer Science (LNCS, volume 4241)

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Conference proceedings info: CVAMIA 2006.

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Table of contents (22 papers)

  1. Clinical Applications

  2. Image Registration

  3. Image Segmentation and Analysis

  4. Poster Session

Other volumes

  1. Computer Vision Approaches to Medical Image Analysis

Keywords

About this book

Medical imaging and medical image analysis are developing rapidly. While m- ical imaging has already become a standard of modern medical care, medical image analysis is still mostly performed visually and qualitatively. The ev- increasing volume of acquired data makes it impossible to utilize them in full. Equally important, the visual approaches to medical image analysis are known to su?er from a lack of reproducibility. A signi?cant researche?ort is devoted to developing algorithms for processing the wealth of data available and extracting the relevant information in a computerized and quantitative fashion. Medical imaging and image analysis are interdisciplinary areas combining electrical, computer, and biomedical engineering; computer science; mathem- ics; physics; statistics; biology; medicine; and other ?elds. Medical imaging and computer vision, interestingly enough, have developed and continue developing somewhat independently. Nevertheless, bringing them together promises to b- e?t both of these ?elds. This was the second time that a satellite workshop,solely devoted to medical image analysis issues, was held in conjunction with the European Conference on Computer Vision (ECCV), and we are optimistic that this will become a tradition at ECCV. We received 38 full-length paper submissions to the second Computer Vision Approaches to Medical Image Analysis (CVAMIA) Workshop, out of which 10 were accepted for oral and 11 for poster presentation after a rigorous peer-review process. In addition, the workshop included three invited talks. The ?rst was given by Maryellen Giger from the University of Chicago, USA — titled “Multi-Modality Breast CADx”.

Editors and Affiliations

  • Dept. of Electrical & Computer Engineering and Dept. of Internal Medicine, The University of Iowa, USA

    Reinhard R. Beichel

  • Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, University of Iowa, Iowa City, USA

    Milan Sonka

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