Repetitive Motion Compensation for Real Time Intraoperative Video Processing

Optical imaging is a modality of choice for surgery assistance: it is inexpensive, it has high temporal and spatial resolution and, as opposed to magnetic resonance or computational tomography, it implies only limited constraints on the surgical material and room. This is why even simple devices such as true color camera are often used for assistance or monitoring during surgical intervention or radiotherapy for a variety of body parts: brain (Pichette et  al., 2016), heart (Richa et al., 2011) or abdomen (Spinczyk et al., 2014) for example.
Source: Medical Image Analysis - Category: Radiology Authors: Source Type: research