I'm just curious as to how exactly this will help with medicine. Aren't you just imposing an image of the skeleton or muscle tissue or whatever it is you want to look at on top of the video? This wouldn't actually show actual ailments of the patient, but rather what it SHOULD look like underneath (unless that is your intent when using this technology).
Kerbii, we register here 3D bones structure taken from CT scans with the thorax phantom and the lady and then fuse colors of video data and such bone structures using a technique known as ghosting.
The intent of this kind of Augmented Reality scene is to use it during surgery for navigation procedures, e.g. finding the tumor or guiding a surgical drill or other instruments inside the body.
Good point. This, however, also shows depth perception, something that normal diagrams won't show. This is a real-time simulation, not a pre-recorded and edited video.
Hi, acctually we visualize patient spezific data. In the girl's case we used a CT scan of her head. We think of different intraoperative applications such as surgical navigation. However, education, simulation, training might be another good target application.
well, it would be a 3D scan, like the one of the brain, and then used on the patient, for a beter view, though there's not a way to 3D scan like THAT, it would help medicine school, to make better doctors
pretty awesome, but I fail to see the usefulness
DerUnbekannte 11 months ago
@DerUnbekannte
we want to use this for surgeries to allow a surgeon looking inside the patient. this would improve especially minimally invasive surgeries
campTUM 11 months ago
We could all have one of these at home,
then we could detect if we had a broken bone or not.
And if we did have a broken bone,
We would need to visit the doctor,
who would also put one of these on there heads
seanwasere 2 years ago
@seanwasere
This is not a xray.
LamaPaj 1 year ago
creepy :) any paper about how the shadow was done?
iwantcoolname 2 years ago
I'm just curious as to how exactly this will help with medicine. Aren't you just imposing an image of the skeleton or muscle tissue or whatever it is you want to look at on top of the video? This wouldn't actually show actual ailments of the patient, but rather what it SHOULD look like underneath (unless that is your intent when using this technology).
Kerbii 2 years ago
Kerbii, we register here 3D bones structure taken from CT scans with the thorax phantom and the lady and then fuse colors of video data and such bone structures using a technique known as ghosting.
The intent of this kind of Augmented Reality scene is to use it during surgery for navigation procedures, e.g. finding the tumor or guiding a surgical drill or other instruments inside the body.
chrisbich 2 years ago
Good point. This, however, also shows depth perception, something that normal diagrams won't show. This is a real-time simulation, not a pre-recorded and edited video.
onlyontuesdays99 2 years ago
Hi, acctually we visualize patient spezific data. In the girl's case we used a CT scan of her head. We think of different intraoperative applications such as surgical navigation. However, education, simulation, training might be another good target application.
chrisbich 2 years ago
The images can come from cat/mri scans of the patient.
twdarkflame 2 years ago
well, it would be a 3D scan, like the one of the brain, and then used on the patient, for a beter view, though there's not a way to 3D scan like THAT, it would help medicine school, to make better doctors
cetko13 2 years ago
they could somehow integrate it with an MRI
noahraymond24 2 years ago
Very impressive stuff.
The shadeing/shadows are blended in very well.
twdarkflame 2 years ago
wow shs hot like that...
arktikgraywolf 3 years ago