With a mind toward the effective acquisition, processing, presentation, and reading of radiological images, a survey of how the human visual system perceives images is presented here. The level is chosen to be suitable for the radiologist, and the relative emphasis on the various visual cues of luminance, color, form, texture, motion, and depth is chosen based on their importance with radiological images. Examples of the radiological relevance of the various visual properties are given. We cover first what the visual system's behavior is and then survey some of the properties of the physiological mechanisms that provide this behavior
The need for quantitative image analysis in radiology is universal: computer-aided detection, segmen...
The need for quantitative image analysis in radiology is universal: computer-aided detection, segmen...
The need for quantitative image analysis in radiology is universal: computer-aided detection, segmen...
With a mind toward the effective acquisition, processing, presentation, and reading of radiological ...
With a mind toward the effective acquisition, processing, presentation, and reading of radiological ...
With a mind toward the effective acquisition, processing, presentation, and reading of radiological ...
With a mind toward the effective acquisition, processing, presentation, and reading of radiological ...
Any diagnostic decision that involves imaging techniques depends not entirely on the images themselv...
Any diagnostic decision that involves imaging techniques depends not entirely on the images themselv...
When a radiologist is presented with a medical image, be it a radiograph or the many hundreds of ima...
When a radiologist is presented with a medical image, be it a radiograph or the many hundreds of ima...
When a radiologist is presented with a medical image, be it a radiograph or the many hundreds of ima...
When a radiologist is presented with a medical image, be it a radiograph or the many hundreds of ima...
The function of medical imaging is to provide information \ud and to reduce diagnostic uncertainty. ...
The function of medical imaging is to provide information \ud and to reduce diagnostic uncertainty. ...
The need for quantitative image analysis in radiology is universal: computer-aided detection, segmen...
The need for quantitative image analysis in radiology is universal: computer-aided detection, segmen...
The need for quantitative image analysis in radiology is universal: computer-aided detection, segmen...
With a mind toward the effective acquisition, processing, presentation, and reading of radiological ...
With a mind toward the effective acquisition, processing, presentation, and reading of radiological ...
With a mind toward the effective acquisition, processing, presentation, and reading of radiological ...
With a mind toward the effective acquisition, processing, presentation, and reading of radiological ...
Any diagnostic decision that involves imaging techniques depends not entirely on the images themselv...
Any diagnostic decision that involves imaging techniques depends not entirely on the images themselv...
When a radiologist is presented with a medical image, be it a radiograph or the many hundreds of ima...
When a radiologist is presented with a medical image, be it a radiograph or the many hundreds of ima...
When a radiologist is presented with a medical image, be it a radiograph or the many hundreds of ima...
When a radiologist is presented with a medical image, be it a radiograph or the many hundreds of ima...
The function of medical imaging is to provide information \ud and to reduce diagnostic uncertainty. ...
The function of medical imaging is to provide information \ud and to reduce diagnostic uncertainty. ...
The need for quantitative image analysis in radiology is universal: computer-aided detection, segmen...
The need for quantitative image analysis in radiology is universal: computer-aided detection, segmen...
The need for quantitative image analysis in radiology is universal: computer-aided detection, segmen...