Call for Papers

heart Many strategies for medical image analysis have been built on an image analysis pipeline that starts with acquired image data, performs filtering and processing, constructs geometric models of important surfaces and structures, performs simulation, and finally provides quantitative and visual analysis of the data. Within this pipeline, geometry and shape are commonly represented as a mesh, or a discretization of some domain into simpler computational elements such as quads or triangles (representative of surface pieces) or tetrahedra and hexahedra (representative of volumetric elements). This image-to-mesh (I2M) step converts volumetric images into formats that are more suitable for solving finite-element simulations, analyzing critical structures, and performing boundary surface visualization tasks. Current research in computational geometry, graphics hardware, and computer graphics has produced methods to represent, extract, refine, visualize and analyze both critical surfaces embedded in the 3D volumes, such as interfaces between tissues, as well as volumetric regions, such as organs. skull

The workshop investigates the role meshes have with medical image analysis and is broadly based on three overlapping themes:

  1. Mesh processing,
  2. The I2M pipeline,
  3. Surface analysis and extraction.

While numerous I2M technologies have been developed, rarely do they get sufficient exposure so that out-of-field researchers have the necessary expertise to know the nuances between them. Similarly, researchers in geometry, meshing, and surfacing often consider their problems in independent settings, external to their use in a particular pipeline. In particular, there is a need for designing novel technologies that strictly focus on medical image domains. This workshop proposes to improve the cross-pollination of the imaging and meshing efforts by considering how meshing fits into the end-to-end pipeline from image acquisition to clinical analysis.

We invite papers on the following topics. There is a large overlap and we believe that many submissions may be classified into several categories that span these groups.: torso

Under the mesh processing topic:

  • Mesh representations (triangles, tetrahedral, quads, implicit, medial, parametric).
  • Mesh extraction and regularization.
  • Mesh registration.
  • Meshing for FEM/BEM computation.
  • Mesh generation of both multi-modal and segmented datasets.
  • Quality metrics and mesh quality improvement techniques.

Under the I2M pipeline topic:

  • Mesh and surface acquisition techniques including range scanning.
  • Construction of volumetric meshes from surface meshes.
  • Processing of acquired image data to make it more appropriate for current meshing techniques.
  • I2M algorithms/software for meshing image data.
  • Post-processing of meshes to improve their applicability to simulation and analysis.
  • I2M visualization.
  • Novel analysis areas that necessitate I2M conversion techniques, for example, computational anatomy, electro-physical simulation, and brain and neuro-science imaging.

Under the surface analysis and extraction topic:

  • Surface feature extraction and matching.
  • Surface warping and deformations.
  • Shape and topology analysis.
  • Tracking and surface evolution.
  • Computing paths on surfaces (e.g. geodesics).
  • Mappings between surfaces (e.g. conformal or harmonic maps).
  • Symmetry analysis.

Proceedings

Springer Proceedings will by published by Springer within the Lecture Notes in Computer Science (LNCS) series.

Paper Submission

There is an 8 to 12 page paper limit (8 pages recommended) and the papers should be formatted in the Springer LNCS style. Latex submissions are strongly encouraged and the initial submission shall be formatted in PDF.

Online submission of papers is handled through the EasyChair system.

The papers will be subjected to a single blind review (they should not be anonymised) and each paper will be reviewed by two or three reviewers. The final decision will be given by the program comittee and the organisers.

The Springer Copyright form for MeshMed 2012 needs to be signed and mailed to the workshop organisers.

The submission deadline for this workshop is set so it is possible to submit papers that are not accepted at the main MICCAI conference. However, simultanous submission to several MICCAI workshops is not accepted.