RESEARCH SEMINARS


October 1, 1994 - September 30, 1995

Seminars sponsored by the Office of Science and Technology and presented in Rockville, MD.

Barrett H H. University of Arizona. The use of the crosstalk matrix in the assessment of imaging systems. July 24, 1995.

Blume H. Philips Medical Systems. ACR/NEMA display standard. January 11, 1995.

Burke H. New York Medical College. Survival prediction in cancer using artificial neural networks. April 3, 1995.

Donoghue D. Center for Veterinary Medicine. Drug residues in eggs. February 1, 1995.

Holland MM. The Armed Forces DNA Identification Laboratory, The Armed Forces Institute of Pathology. The role of molecular genetics in forensic sciences: new technologies and regulatory issues. April 24, 1995.

Eskin J. University of Arizona. Making semiconductor detectors work for SPECT. October 28, 1994.

Freiburger P. Duke University. Ultrasonic imaging of the female breast: solving the problem of fat aberrations. October 21, 1994.

Irvine J. Environmental Research Institute of Michigan. Free-response ROC curves. January 5, 1995.

Reddi AH. Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. Symbiosis of biotechnology and biomaterials: applications in tissue engineering of bone and cartilage. June 5, 1995.

Reeder D. National Institutes of Standards and Technology, Department of Commerce. Applications of DNA chip technology and genosensors to medical devices. June 12, 1995.

Schwartz RA. U.S. Patent Office. Patent issues of biotechnology products. September 18, 1995.

Wagner RF. Research physicist, Office of Science and Technology, CDRH, FDA. A unified framework for the assessment of diagnostic imaging systems. October 3, 1994.

Wagner RF. Research physicist, Office of Science and Technology, CDRH, FDA. Computer aided diagnosis: an emerging modality. May 4, 1995.


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