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The challenge remains open to submissions and all images are available for download.There is clinical evidence that suppressing the bone structures in Chest X-rays (CXRs) improves diagnostic value, either for radiologists or computer-aided diagnosis. However, bone-free CXRs are not always accessible. We hereby propose a coarse-to-fine CXR bone suppression approach by using structural priors derived from unpaired computed tomography (CT) images. In the low-resolution stage, we use the digitally reconstructed radiograph (DRR) image that is computed from CT as a bridge to connect CT and CXR. We then perform CXR bone decomposition by leveraging the DRR bone decomposition model learned from unpaired CTs and domain adaptation between CXR and DRR. To further mitigate the domain differences between CXRs and DRRs and speed up the learning convergence, we perform all the aboved operations in Laplacian of Gaussian (LoG) domain. After obtaining the bone decomposition result in DRR, we upsample it to a high resolution, based on which the bone region in the original high-resolution CXR is cropped and processed to produce a high-resolution bone decomposition result. Finally, such a produced bone image is subtracted from the original high-resolution CXR to obtain the bone suppression result. We conduct experiments and clinical evaluations based on two benchmarking CXR databases to show that (i) the proposed method outperforms the state-of-the-art unsupervised CXR bone suppression approaches; (ii) the CXRs with bone suppression are instrumental to radiologists for reducing their false-negative rate of lung diseases from 15% to 8%; and (iii) state-of-the-art disease classification performances are achieved by learning a deep network that takes the original CXR and its bone-suppressed image as inputs.Cardiac Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) is time-consuming and error-prone. To ease the patient's burden and to increase the efficiency and robustness of cardiac exams, interest in methods based on continuous steady-state acquisition and self-gating has been growing in recent years. Self-gating methods extract the cardiac and respiratory signals from the measurement data and then retrospectively sort the data into cardiac and respiratory phases. Repeated breathholds and synchronization with the heart beat using some external device as required in conventional MRI are then not necessary. In this work, we introduce a novel self-gating method for radially acquired data based on a dimensionality reduction technique for time-series analysis (SSA-FARY). Building on Singular Spectrum Analysis, a zero-padded, time-delayed embedding of the auto-calibration data is analyzed using Principle Component Analysis. We demonstrate the basic functionality of SSA-FARY using numerical simulations and apply it to in-vivo cardiac radial single-slice bSSFP and Simultaneous Multi-Slice radiofrequency-spoiled gradientecho measurements, as well as to Stack-of-Stars bSSFP measurements. SSA-FARY reliably detects the cardiac and respiratory motion and separates it from noise. We utilize the generated signals for high-dimensional image reconstruction using parallel imaging and compressed sensing with in-plane wavelet and (spatio-)temporal total-variation regularization.We present an approach for jointly matching and segmenting object instances of the same category within a collection of images. In contrast to existing algorithms that tackle the tasks of semantic matching and object co-segmentation in isolation, our method exploits the complementary nature of the two tasks. The key insights of our method are two-fold. click here First, the estimated dense correspondence fields from semantic matching provide supervision for object co-segmentation by enforcing consistency between the predicted masks from a pair of images. Second, the predicted object masks from object co-segmentation, in turn, allow us to reduce the adverse effects due to background clutters for improving semantic matching. Our model is end-to-end trainable and does not require supervision from manually annotated correspondences and object masks. We validate the efficacy of our approach on five benchmark datasets TSS, Internet, PF-PASCAL, PF-WILLOW, and SPair-71k, and show that our algorithm performs favorably against the state-of-the-art methods on both semantic matching and object co-segmentation tasks.This paper considers and solves the problem of estimating camera pose given a pair of point-tangent correspondences between a 3D scene and a projected image. The problem arises when considering curve geometry as the basis of forming correspondences, computation of structure and calibration, which in its simplest form is a point augmented with the curve tangent. We show that while the resectioning problem is solved with a minimum of three points given the intrinsic parameters, when points are augmented with tangent information only two points are required, leading to substantial robustness and computational savings, e.g., as a minimal engine within RANSAC. In addition, algorithms are developed to find a practical solution shown to effectively recover camera pose using synthetic and real datasets. This technology is intended as a building block of curve-based structure from motion systems, allowing new views to be incrementally registered to a core set of views for which relative pose has been computed.OBJECTIVE Photo-mediated ultrasound therapy (PUT) is a novel, non-invasive, agent-free, highly selective, and precise anti-vascular technique. PUT removes microvessels through promoting cavitation activity precisely in targeted microvessels by applying synchronized nanosecond laser pulses and ultrasound bursts. The synchronization between laser and ultrasound is critical to the outcome of PUT. METHODS Through theoretical simulation and experimental study, the effect of synchronization between laser pulses and ultrasound bursts on cavitation activity during PUT is evaluated. RESULTS By using a theoretical model, we found that cavitation activity was enhanced when laser pulses and ultrasound bursts were synchronized such that the produced photoacoustic wave overlaid the rarefactional phase of the ultrasound wave. This finding was then verified through in vitro studies where cavitation was monitored by using a passive cavitation detector. Furthermore, we demonstrated that the in vivo treatment outcome of PUT in rabbits was directly related to the synchronization between laser and ultrasound.

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