scholarly journals Marker‐free optical stereo motion tracking for in‐bore MRI and PET‐MRI application

2020 ◽  
Vol 47 (8) ◽  
pp. 3321-3331 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andre Z. Kyme ◽  
Murat Aksoy ◽  
David L. Henry ◽  
Roland Bammer ◽  
Julian Maclaren
Author(s):  
Keyvan Amini Khoiy ◽  
Alireza Mirbagheri ◽  
Farzam Farahmand ◽  
Saeed Bagheri

Assistant robots are widely used in laparoscopic surgery to facilitate the camera holding and manipulation task. A variety of a hands-free operator interfaces have been implemented for user control of the robots, including voice commands, foot pedals, and eye and head motion tracking systems. This paper proposes a novel user control interface, based on processing of the laparoscopic images, that enables the robot to automatically adjust the view of the laparoscopic camera without disturbing the surgeon’s concentration. An effective marker-free detection method was investigated to track the instrument position in the laparoscopic images in real time so that the robot could center the instrument tip in the camera view. Considering several available methods it was found that a color space analysis, based on the quantitative comparison of the background’s and instrument’s pixels color contexts, provides the best results. The color contexts were presented in covariance matrix and mean values and analyzed using Mahalanobis distance measure in RGB color space. Tests on laparoscopic images with controlled conditions, e.g., sufficient light and low noises, revealed 86 percent correct detection with a processing rate of 3.7 frames per second on a conventional PC. Further work is going on to improve the algorithm.


2010 ◽  
Vol 20 (2) ◽  
pp. 29-36
Author(s):  
Erin M. Wilson ◽  
Ignatius S. B. Nip

Abstract Although certain speech development milestones are readily observable, the developmental course of speech motor control is largely unknown. However, recent advances in facial motion tracking systems have been used to investigate articulator movements in children and the findings from these studies are being used to further our understanding of the physiologic basis of typical and disordered speech development. Physiologic work has revealed that the emergence of speech is highly dependent on the lack of flexibility in the early oromotor system. It also has been determined that the progression of speech motor development is non-linear, a finding that has motivated researchers to investigate how variables such as oromotor control, cognition, and linguistic factors affect speech development in the form of catalysts and constraints. Physiologic data are also being used to determine if non-speech oromotor behaviors play a role in the development of speech. This improved understanding of the physiology underlying speech, as well as the factors influencing its progression, helps inform our understanding of speech motor control in children with disordered speech and provide a framework for theory-driven therapeutic approaches to treatment.


2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
C Enzensberger ◽  
L Rostock ◽  
M Götte ◽  
A Wolter ◽  
J Herrmann ◽  
...  
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