Friday 25 September 2009

The MICCAI conference 2009

Earlier this week, IXICO was exhibiting at the MICCAI conference in London. This is an international conference to do with the analysis of medical images – with lots of really mathematical stuff presented by computer scientists and engineers. MICCAI stands for Medical Image Computing and Computer Assisted Interventions, so as well as analysis of images, it also has presentations on robotics. The people presenting at the MICCAI meeting are trying to invent new ways of using images to diagnose disease, plan treatment, monitor treatment progress or even control robotic surgery. If you get your work accepted at MICCAI you are doing very well, as less than 10% of work submitted is accepted for a talk.

MICCAI this year was in London, and two of IXICO’s founders – Dave Hawkes and Daniel Rueckert – were involved in organizing it. One of IXICO’s software developers – Sergiy Milko– was also presenting his work.

The people coming to MICCAI all use medical images in their research, and so all have to deal with the problem of moving around these images, collecting them from scanners, ensuring patient privacy rules are obeyed, and sharing the images with colleagues. All too often, the medical images used in this sort of research are not very well looked after – and get lost or mis-placed. If you don’t know what sort of patient the images are collected from, then they become useless for almost all types of research.

That is one reason we decided that MICCAI would be a good place to show everyone Trial Wire - http://www.mytrialwire.com/ – our free tool to share, de-identify and organize your DICOM medical images, and also show people Trial Tracker – our latest product that provides a web-based image management system for comprehensive management of all imaging data from acquisition to analysis. You can get more information on Trial Tracker here
www.ixico.com/newproducts/trialtracker

And I nearly forgot – a real highlight of MICCAI was the conference dinner. It was held in the Science Museum. London’s science museum contains fascinating material, from old steam engines to Apollo lander to CT scanners. On the computing side, it contains really ancient computer gizmos - Baggage’s mechanical computer from 150 years go, or the computer memory developed 50 years ago for the Manchester computer). You couldn’t do much image analysis on those systems: modern scanners can generate 1Gbyte of data per patient!

So it was among all these fascinating exhibits that the MICCAI banquet was held – with stilt walkers, jugglers, and a disco. Quite an event!

To find out more about MICCAI go to http://www.miccai.org/

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