journals.iop.org home page electronic journals * User guide   * Site map   | Quick Search:Help  
Physics in Medicine and Biology
Athens/Institutional login
IOP login: Password:   
Create account | Alerts | Contact us
Journals Home | Journals List | EJs Extra | This Journal | Search | Authors | Referees | Librarians | User Options | Help |

Digitally reconstructed radiograph generation by an adaptive Monte Carlo method

Xiaoliang Li et al 2006 Phys. Med. Biol. 51 2745-2752   doi: 10.1088/0031-9155/51/11/004  Help

   PDF (356 KB) | References | Articles citing this article

Xiaoliang Li1, Jie Yang1 and Yuemin Zhu2
1 Institute of Image Processing & Pattern Recognition, Shanghai Jiaotong University, Shanghai, 200240, People's Republic of China
2 CREATIS-CNRS research unit 5515 & Inserm unit 630, 69621 Villeurbanne Cedex, France

Abstract. Digitally reconstructed radiograph (DRR) generation is an important step in several medical imaging applications such as 2D–3D image registration, where the generation of DRR is a rate-limiting step. We present a novel DRR generation technique, called the adaptive Monte Carlo volume rendering (AMCVR) algorithm. It is based on the conventional Monte Carlo volume rendering (MCVR) technique that is very efficient for rendering large medical datasets. In contrast to the MCVR, the AMCVR does not produce sample points by sampling directly in the entire volume domain. Instead, it adaptively divides the entire volume domain into sub-domains using importance separation and then performs sampling in these sub-domains. As a result, the AMCVR produces almost the same image quality as that obtained with the MCVR while only using half samples, and increases projection speed by a factor of 2. Moreover, the AMCVR is suitable for fast memory addressing, which further improves processing speed. Independent of the size of medical datasets, the AMCVR allows for achieving a frame rate of about 15 Hz on a 2.8 GHz Pentium 4 PC while generating reasonably good quality DRR.

Print publication: Issue 11 (7 June 2006)
Received 20 September 2005, in final form 7 March 2006
Published 9 May 2006

Bookmark and Share Post to CiteUlike | Post to Connotea | Post to Bibsonomy

 


Find related articles






Article options

Authors & Referees

 
Content finder
  Full Search
  Help


  
Setup information is available for Adobe Acrobat.
EndNote, ProCite ® and Reference Manager ® are registered trademarks of ISI Researchsoft.
Copyright © Institute of Physics and IOP Publishing Limited 2009.
Use of this service is subject to compliance with the terms and conditions of use. In particular, reselling and systematic downloading of files is prohibited.
Help: Cookies | Data Protection.