DocumentCode
2589296
Title
Elastic spline models for human cardiac motion estimation
Author
Chen, F. ; Suter, D.
Author_Institution
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Syst. Eng., Monash Univ., Clayton, Vic., Australia
fYear
1997
fDate
35597
Firstpage
120
Lastpage
127
Abstract
Elastic splines (including dynamic “snakes” and elastic contours), minimising an energy norm of the membrane and/or thin-plate types, have been used to model many surfaces in visual reconstruction and related biomedical applications. The authors model the displacement of the material between successive cardiac images using vector splines. They define a family of elastic splines. These splines can be tuned to enforce different types and different degrees of smoothness. They assess how well these splines can be used to reconstruct human cardiac motion. The proposed method has been implemented based on MRI projection data
Keywords
biomechanics; biomedical NMR; biomembranes; cardiology; image reconstruction; medical image processing; splines (mathematics); MRI projection data; biomedical applications; dynamic snakes; elastic contours; elastic spline models; human cardiac motion estimation; human cardiac motion reconstruction; material displacement modelling; membrane; minimised energy norm; smoothness; successive cardiac images; surface modelling; thin-plate types; vector splines; visual reconstruction; Active contours; Biomembranes; Computer vision; History; Humans; Image reconstruction; Magnetic resonance imaging; Motion estimation; Spline; Surface reconstruction;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Nonrigid and Articulated Motion Workshop, 1997. Proceedings., IEEE
Conference_Location
San Juan
Print_ISBN
0-8186-8040-7
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/NAMW.1997.609862
Filename
609862
Link To Document