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The Visible Human Project |
Sponsored by the National Library of Medicine
Almost two years have passed since the 1st Users Conference of the National Library of Medicine's Visible Human Project. The user community has now burgeoned to over 1,000 sites in 41 countries adding many new licensees. This ever increasing interest in the Visible Human data sets raises discussions of basic anatomical and computer research issues which need attention. The Second Visible Human Project Conference is designed to provide a forum for the discussion of these research issues. Conference participants will have an opportunity to view results obtained and address problems encountered using the Visible Human data sets. The objectives of the conference are to foster scholarly discussions and to encourage new collaborations. On behalf of the National Library of Medicine, we would like to invite you to join us for this event.
Michael J. Ackerman, Ph.D.
Richard A. Banvard, M.A.
Conference Chairs
Inside Out: The Visible Human Exhibit at Baltimore's Maryland Science Center
Baltimore's Maryland Science Center (MSC) chose to feature the Visible Human in a major exhibit. The exhibit, filled with holograms, 3D imagery, multi-media displays, models and even real tissue, debuted in Baltimore, and will travel to Boston, Philadelphia, Chicago, Los Angeles, and San Francisco, among others cities. Mr. Gregory P. Andorfer, Executive Director and Chief Executive Officer of the Maryland Science Center will explain why the exhibit was mounted and what public reaction has been. Mr. Andorfer joined MSC following a twenty year television career, spent primarily in public television, producing major science series and specials, including COSMOS with Carl Sagan, PLANET EARTH with the National Academy of Sciences, and most recently the Discovery Channels highest rated program ever, TITANIC: ANATOMY OF A DISASTER. Greg was schooled at Kenyon College, earned his MBA in Arts Management from UCLA, and was awarded an honorary doctorate for his contributions to science communications. He virtually qualifies as man of steel, having completed Hawaii's grueling Ironman Triathlon. Mr. Andorfer will provide some insight into whether being anatomically correct is compatible with being politically correct.
DAY 1 - Morning | ||
9:00 - 10:45 | PANEL - 1 / OPEN DISCUSSION P. Molholt - Moderator Creating Applications Based on the Visible Human Data Set |
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10:45 - 11:15 | COFFEE BREAK | |
11:15 - 1:00 | PANEL - 2 / OPEN
DISCUSSION C. Imielinska - Moderator Technical Challenges Encountered with the Visible Human Data Set |
PANEL - 3 / OPEN DISCUSSION
P. Dev, N. Wacholder, Moderators Knowledge Representation and Structured Information in the Visible Human Project |
1:00 - 2:00 | LUNCH |
DAY 1 - Afternoon | |||
2:00 - 3:00 | PLENARY SESSION D. Lindberg Director, National Library of Medicine H. Slavkin Director, National Institute of Dental Research Keynote Address: G. Andorfer Executive Director, Maryland Science Center |
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3:00 - 3:30 | COFFEE BREAK | ||
3:30 - 5:00 | SESSION - 1 Segmentation
Chair: E. Henderson W. Wang - Volume Segmentation of the Visible Human Data Set F. Cordier - Comparison of Two Techniques for Organ Reconstruction Using the Visible Human Data Set S. Senger - User Directed Segmentation of the Visible Human Data Sets in an Immersive Environment S. Crawford-Hines - Machine-Learned Assist for Boundary Contour Tracing |
SESSION - 2 Education
Chair: N. Wacholder A. Lane - Sectional Anatomy: Strategy for Mastery L. Guglielmi Visible Human Data Set - Milano Mirror Site: Additional Services for the Primers and the Professional Users of the VHD P. Molholt - Vesalius Project- Creating a Computer Based Anatomy Curriculum J. Venuti - Development of a Pelvic Anatomy Lesson: Innovation in Electronic Curriculum for Medical Students |
SESSION - 3 Evolving
Applications Chair: F. Pinciroli L. Laino-Pepper - A Discussion of Visible Human Color File Formats J. Seymour - Virtual Human: Live Volume Rendering of the Segmented and Classified Visible Human Male in a CD-ROM Product for PCs T. McCracken - New and Innovative Uses of Visible Human Images and Beyond R. Chiou - Unified Analysis, Modeling, Matching and Synthesis for CT Color Texture Mapping from the Visible Human Data Set |
DAY 1 - Evening | |||
5:00 - 7:00 | RECEPTION |
DAY 2 - Morning | ||
9:00 - 10:30 | SESSION - 4 Simulation /
Modeling 1 Chair: L. Guglielmi R. Robb - From the Visible Human to Real Patients: Development and Evaluation of Clinical Procedures G. Szekely - Anatomical Model Generation for Laparoscopic Surgery Simulation F. Sachse - Applications of the Visible Human Man Data Set in Electrocardiology: Calculation and Visualization of Body Surface Potential Maps of a Complete Heart Cycle H. Le - Practical Applications of the Visible Human Explorer |
SESSION - 5 Image
Processing Chair: P. Molholt S. Mitra - Wavelet-Based Adaptive Vector Quantization for High Fidelity Compression and Fast Transmission of Visible Human Color Images S. Park - Wavelet-Based 3D Compression Schemes for the Visible Human Data Set and Their Applications P. Cerveri - Multi-Resolution Image Representation Through Compression for Speeding Up Navigation in the Visible Human Data Set Archive E. Henderson - VHIF: A Prototype File Format for Anatomical Images |
10:30 - 11:00 | COFFEE BREAK | |
11:00 - 12:30 | SESSION - 6 Simulation /
Modeling 2 Chair: R. Banvard E. Prakash - Goal-Directed Deformation of the Visible Human J. Kerr - Anthropometric Scaling of a 3D Anatomy Database Created from the Visible Human Male Data Set K. Yang - Finite Element Modeling of the Human Thorax C. Werner - Applications of the Visible Human Data Set in Electrocardiology: Simulation of the Electrical Excitation Propagation |
SESSION - 7
Visualization Chair: P. Dev C. Imielinska - Technical Challenges of 3D Visualization of Large Color Data Sets M. Ross - High Fidelity Imaging for PC Applications: From Visible Human Data Sets to Patient-Specific Imaging for Internet Communications J. Stewart - Improved 3D Anatomic Understanding Through Stereoscopic Visualization R. Zhou - Visualization of Anatomical Images Using the 3DSystems Database |
12:30 - 1:30 | COFFEE BREAK | |
DAY 2 - Afternoon | ||
1:30 - 3:00 | SESSION - 8 Internet
Chair: M. Ackerman F. Pinciroli - The First Annual Report of the Visible Human Data Set - Milano Mirror Site R. Hersch - A Parallel PC-Based Visible Human Slice WEB Server J. Seamans - Network Distribution of the Visible Human Data Set A. Ade - The Visible Human Female World Wide Web Browser |
SESSION - 9 Knowledge
Representation Chair: C. Imielinska P. Cerveri - The VHD-MMS Agent Retriever: An Image Retrieval System Based on Object-Oriented Architecture and Software Agents N. Wacholder - An Ontology-Based Navigation System for Human Anatomy P. Dev - Structuring Metainformation for Anatomy Images: XML as the Preferred Metainformation Interchange Language H. Nogawa - An Application of an End-User Computing Environment for the Visible Human Project |
Michael J. Ackerman, Ph.D., National Library of Medicine
Alexander S. Ade, University of Michigan
Gregory P.
Andorfer, Executive Director, Maryland Science Center
Richard
A. Banvard, M.A., National Library of Medicine
Pietro
Cerveri, Politecnico di Milano, Italy
Rui Chiou, Ph.D.,
State University of New York, Stony Brook
Frederic Cordier,
MIRALab, University of Geneva, Switzerland
Stewart
Crawford-Hines, Colorado State University
Parvati Dev,
Ph.D., SUMMIT, Stanford University
Luciano Guglielmi,
Dott., CILEA, Milano, IT
Earl Henderson, National
Library of Medicine
Roger D. Hersch, Prof., Ecole
Polytechnique Federale, Lausanne, Switzerland
Celina Imielinska,
Ph.D., Columbia University
John P. Kerr, Ph.D.,
Engineering Animations, Inc.
Lisa Laino-Pepper, M.S.,
Stevens Institute of Technology
Alexander Lane, Ph.D.,
Triton College
Hao Le, Flashback Imaging Inc.
Donald A. B. Lindberg, M.D., Director, National Library of
Medicine
Thomas McCraken, Visible Productions
Sunanda Mitra, Ph.D., Texas Tech University
Pat
Molholt, Ph.D., Columbia University
Hiroki Nogawa, M.D.,
Ph.D., Sapporo Medical University, Sapporo, Japan
Sanghun Park, Sogang University, Seoul, Korea
Francesco Pinciroli, Prof., Politecnico di Milano, Italy
Edmond C. Prakash, Ph.D., Nanyang Technological University,
Singapore
Richard A. Robb, Ph.D., Mayo Foundation / Clinic
Muriel D. Ross, Ph.D., NASA Ames Research Center
Frank
B.. Sachse, Ph.D., University of Karlsruhe, Karlsruhe, Germany
James Seamans, National Library of Medicine
Steven O.
Senger, Ph.D., University of Wisconsin - La Crosse
Jon
Seymour, M.D., Gold Standard Multimedia, Inc.
Harold C.
Slavkin, D.D.S., Director, National Institute of Dental Research
John E. Stewart, Virginia Commonwealth University
Gabor
Szekely, Ph.D., Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, Zurich,
Switzerland
Judith M. Venuti, Ph.D., Columbia University
Nina Wacholder, Ph.D., Columbia University
Wenjian
Wang, University of Cincinnati
C.D. Werner, University
of Karlsruhe, Karlsruhe, Germany
King H. Yang, Ph.D., Wayne
State University
Ruixia Zhou, Ph.D., National Library of
Medicine
Conference Location
William H. Natcher Conference Center
National Institutes of Health
Building 45
45 Center Drive
Bethesda, Maryland 20892
(301) 496-9966
Registration
Please print or type the information
requested on the registration
formThis information will be used for the participants list and for your
name badge. You may photocopy the registration for others who plan to
attend. Payment must accompany the registration card for the
registration to be processed. Please complete the attached
registration form and mail it along with your registration fee no later than
September 18, 1998.
Fee: $295.00 for General Participants
$150.00
for Student Participants
Please make checks payable to Management Assistance Corporation. (the
Management Assistance Corp. is acting as an agent of the National Library of
Medicine in coordinating this event - contact Richard Banvard at the NLM
(301-435-3266, banvard@nlm.nih.gov) if further information on the MAC's role is
desired). Purchase orders or credit card payments cannot be accepted. Each
registration includes breaks, an evening reception, conference materials, an
abstract book and the conference proceedings CD-ROM. Mail registration
form with full payment to:
Saundra Bromberg
Management Assistance Corporation
11900 Parklawn Drive, Suite 403
Rockville, Maryland
USA 20852-2624
Registration Deadline: September 18, 1998
Seating is limited. No onsite registration, attendance is limited to pre registered participants only.
Cancellation Policy:
A refund will be made upon written
request prior to September 25, 1998. However, $25.00 will be retained for
administrative costs. No refunds will be made after September 25,
1998. Refund requests should be faxed to Saundra Bromberg of Management
Assistance Corporation at (301) 468-3364.
Bethesda Marriott:
5151 Pooks Hill Road
Bethesda,
Maryland 20814
(301) 897-9400 or
1 (800) 228-9290
Guests are
to identify themselves as part of the Second Visible Human Project
Conference. Deadline for hotel registration is September 9, 1998.
(After this date, reservations will be provided on a space and rate
available basis).
Rate: $126.00 per night.
Shuttle service
available to NIH Campus.
Airports: The Washington, DC, metropolitan area is served by three airports: Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport, Washington Dulles International Airport, and Baltimore-Washington International Airport. Shuttle and taxi services are available from each of these airports to Bethesda, Maryland. Check with ground transportation at the airport for further information. Washington National is the only airport serviced by the area Metro system. To take Metro from National Airport, take the Yellow Line to the Gallery Place station, transfer to the Red Line toward Shady Grove, and exit at the Medical Center station. Signs leading to the Natcher Conference Center can be found at the top of the escalator, and a shuttle to the Bethesda Marriott runs every 30 minutes.
Train: Union Station is located in downtown Washington, D.C. and is serviced by the Metro rail system Red Line.
Metro: Metro rail services the Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport, the Natcher Conference Center and the surrounding Washington metropolitan area. The Bethesda Marriott hotel provides a shuttle service every 30 minutes to the Medical Center station and the Natcher Conference Center.
Paid visitor parking on the NIH Campus is available next to the Natcher Conference Center (Building 45) on Center Drive. The fee is $2.00 per hour or $12.00 per day. Parking maps are available on request.
For further information or assistance, please contact:
Saundra Bromberg
Management Assistance Corporation
11900 Parklawn Drive, Suite, 403
Rockville, MD USA 20852-2624
(301) 816-1720
(301) 468-3364 FAX
E-mail:
mailto:vhp@nlm.nih.gov