Difference between revisions of "Events:May12 2008 FirstMondaySeminar"

From NAMIC Wiki
Jump to: navigation, search
Line 77: Line 77:
 
He is one of the sub-project leader of research project on “Intelligent Surgical Devices” funded by METI(NEDO) (FY 2007-2011).
 
He is one of the sub-project leader of research project on “Intelligent Surgical Devices” funded by METI(NEDO) (FY 2007-2011).
 
He actively participated in the “Translational Systems Biology and Medicine Initiative” in the University of Tokyo funded by JST (FY2007-2009; 1st Phase)
 
He actively participated in the “Translational Systems Biology and Medicine Initiative” in the University of Tokyo funded by JST (FY2007-2009; 1st Phase)
 +
 +
===Sakuma Laboratory's web site===
 +
http://bme.pe.u-tokyo.ac.jp/index_e.html

Revision as of 19:54, 24 April 2008

Home < Events:May12 2008 FirstMondaySeminar
Poster - click to enlarge

Location and Time

  • Date: Monday, May 12, 2008
  • Time:12:00 - 1:00pm
  • Location:Anesthesia Conference Room, L1, Brigham and Women's Hospital, 75 Francis St, Boston, MA 02115
  • Direction:Enter at the 75 Francis Street entrance. Bear to your right down the Brigham and Women's "ground pike". You will see the Connors Center for Women and Newborns elevator on your left. If you walk past the copper statues, you have gone too far. Take the elevator down to L-1. Exit the elevator; you will see a sign pointing to the Anesthesia Conference Room. The room is located at the end of the hall on the right hand side. Direction to 75 Francis Street entrance of Brigham and Women's Hospital acan be found here.

Action-and Workflow-driven Augmented Reality for Computer Aided Medical Procedures

Dr. Nassir Navab of Technical University of Munchen, Germany

Abstract

A principal difference between Augmented Reality and Virtual Reality is that it does not require the user to immerse into a virtual world. However, AR systems often require additional equipment and displays that for short periods force user immersion into a new environment to see the augmentations. A solution is to create user interfaces that take advantage of AR only when required. One key to the success of such a user interface is its ability to automatically recognize different phases of a workflow, each of which may require various levels of augmentation. It is also important for the AR system to be transparent to the user during the rest of the procedure. These issues have greater importance when dealing with computer-aided surgery applications. In most of these applications, a surgeon needs augmentation for only quite brief periods, such as choosing the ports for a laparoscopic intervention or localizing the major arteries before starting a liver resection. These augmentations, however, can play an important role in the overall procedure's success. During the past three years, CAMP has worked toward development of such integrated AR solutions in the context of minimally invasive surgery. We chose to move into hospital laboratories, creating an environment where surgeons and computer scientists could model the medical procedures and work together to invent new solutions. In this talk, Dr. Navab presents an overview of CAMP's activities and some recent results. The focus is on recovering the workflow, modeling medical procedures and intelligently integrating advanced data fusion, navigation and visualization into such procedures. Professor Navab will present different solutions for trauma surgery, nuclear medicine and interventional radiology applications. Phantom, ex-vivo and in-vivo experiments demonstrate the advantages of such new solutions.

Dr. Navab's Bio

Dr. Nassir Navab is a full professor and director of the institute for Computer Aided Medical Procedures and Augmented Reality (CAMP) at Technical University of Munich (http://campar.in.tum.de). He has also a secondary faculty appointment at the Medical School of TU Munich. Before joining the Computer Science Department at TUM, he was a distinguished member at Siemens Corporate Research (SCR) in Princeton, New Jersey. He received the prestigious Siemens Inventor of the Year Award in 2001 for the body of his work in interventional imaging. He had received his PhD from INRIA and University of Paris XI in France and enjoyed two years of postdoctoral fellowship at MIT Media Laboratory before joining SCR in 1994. In November 2006, he was elected as a member of board of directors of MICCAI society. He has been serving on the Steering Committee of the IEEE Symposium on Mixed and Augmented Reality since 2001. He has served on the program committee of over 30 international conferences. He is the author of hundreds of peer reviewed scientific papers and over 40 US and international patents. His main fields of interest include: Medical Augmented Reality, Computer Aided Surgery and Medical Image Registration.

Navab Laboratory's web site

http://wwwnavab.in.tum.de/WebHome

Integration of Robotics and Biomedical Measurements for Computer Aided Surgery

by Dr. Ichiro Sakuma of Tokyo University, Japan

Abstract

Dr. Sakuma's Bio

WORK EXPERIENCE

April 2006 - date Professor Department of Precision Engineering Graduate School of Engineering, The University of Tokyo April 1999 -Nov. 2001 - Mar. 2006 Associate Professor (April 199-Oct2006), Professor (Nov. 2001-Mar.2006) Institute of Environmental Studies, Graduate School of Frontier Sciences, The University of Tokyo April 1998 - Mar 1999 Associate Professor  Department of Precision Engineering Graduate School of Engineering, The University of Tokyo Aug 1990 - Sept. 1991 Research Instructor Department of Surgery, Baylor College of Medicine. Houston, Texas, The U.S.A. April 1987 - Mar. 1998 Research Associate(1997-1991), Instructor(1991-1992), Assoaiate Professor(1992-1998) Department of Applied Electronic Engineering Faculty of Science and Engineering, Tokyo Denki University April 1985 - Mar 1987 Research Associate  Department of Precision Engineering Graduate School of Engineering, The University of Tokyo

Education

March 1989 Ph.D. in Precision Engineering (1989) from Graduate School of Engineering, The University of Tokyo March 1984 Master of Engineering, Department of Precision Machinery Engineering Graduate School of Engineering, The University of Tokyo Mar 1982 Bachelor in Engineering Department of Precision Machinery Engineering Faculty of Engineering, The University of Tokyo

Membership of Academic Societies

Board member of Japan Society of Computer Aided Surgery Vice president of Japanese Society for Medical and Biological Engineering Board member of Japanese Society for Electrocardiogram Fellow, The Japan Society for Mechanical Engineers Member, The Japan Society for Precision Engineering Member, Japanese Circulation Society Member, IEEE Member International Society for Computer Aided Surgery

Research Interest

Computer Aided Surgery, Surgical Robotics, Biomedical Instrumentation He served as the project leader of JSPS funded research projects on “Development of Surgical Robotic System” from Fy2001-2003. He is one of the sub-project leader of research project on “Intelligent Surgical Devices” funded by METI(NEDO) (FY 2007-2011). He actively participated in the “Translational Systems Biology and Medicine Initiative” in the University of Tokyo funded by JST (FY2007-2009; 1st Phase)

Sakuma Laboratory's web site

http://bme.pe.u-tokyo.ac.jp/index_e.html