| Literature DB >> 28890919 |
Gaurav Shukla1, Roberta L Klatzky2, Bing Wu3, Bo Wang4, John Galeotti5, Brian Chapmann6, George Stetten7.
Abstract
This paper describes a novel method for displaying data obtained by three-dimensional medical imaging, by which the position and orientation of a freely movable screen are optically tracked and used in real time to select the current slice from the data set for presentation. With this method, which we call a "freely moving in-situ medical image", the screen and imaged data are registered to a common coordinate system in space external to the user, at adjustable scale, and are available for free exploration. The three-dimensional image data occupy empty space, as if an invisible patient is being sliced by the moving screen. A behavioral study using real computed tomography lung vessel data established the superiority of the in situ display over a control condition with the same free exploration, but displaying data on a fixed screen (ex situ), with respect to accuracy in the task of tracing along a vessel and reporting spatial relations between vessel structures. A "freely moving in-situ medical image" display appears from these measures to promote spatial navigation and understanding of medical data.Entities:
Keywords: Medical imaging; Radiology; Visualization
Year: 2017 PMID: 28890919 PMCID: PMC5569642 DOI: 10.1186/s41235-017-0069-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cogn Res Princ Implic ISSN: 2365-7464
Fig. 1The FRISM display mounted onto its boom arm. Inset: close-up of infrared emitting diode marker hemisphere
Fig. 2User manipulating the FRISM display, which is freely possible in six degrees of freedom including translations and rotations. A sample slice through a thoracic computed tomography scan is displayed
Fig. 3Computed tomography scans at levels of the mid-carina (branch point of the bronchi), mid-pulmonary artery, and lung base
Fig. 4Mean response against correct angle, for participants with below-median and above-median slope values (low and high performers), by display. Least squares regressions have been fit to the data
Fig. 5Relation between slopes of functions relating response to correct angle for individual participants in the visualization task, along with best-fit line and goodness-of-fit. The diagonal indicates no enhancement from in situ visualization