Biomedical Imaging
โ Scribed by Karen M. Mudry, Robert Plonsey, Joseph D. Bronzino
- Publisher
- CRC Press
- Year
- 2003
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 329
- Series
- Principles and Applications in Engineering
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Comprised of chapters carefully selected from CRC's best-selling engineering handbooks, volumes in the Principles and Applications in Engineering series provide convenient, economical references sharply focused on particular engineering topics and subspecialties. Culled from the Biomedical Engineering Handbook, Biomedical Imaging provides an overview of the main medical imaging devices and highlights emerging systems. With applications ranging from imaging the whole body to replicating cellular components, the imaging modalities discussed include x-ray systems, computed tomographic systems, magnetic resonance imaging, nuclear medicine, ultrasound, MR microscopy, virtual reality, and more.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
While covering both physical and mathematical foundations, this graduate textbook provides the reader with a comprehensive introduction into modern biomedical imaging techniques. These methods are not only based on new instrumentation for image capture, but equally on mathematical advances in the al
ะะทะดะฐัะตะปัััะฒะพ InTech, 2010, -108 pp.<div class="bb-sep"></div>Biomedical imaging is becoming an indispensable branch within bioengineering. This research field has recent expanded due to the requirement of high-level medical diagnostics and rapid development of interdisciplinary modern technologies.
Computers have become an integral part of medical imaging systems and are used for everything from data acquisition and image generation to image display and analysis. As the scope and complexity of imaging technology steadily increase, more advanced techniques are required to solve the emerging cha
Computers have become an integral part of medical imaging systems and are used for everything from data acquisition and image generation to image display and analysis. As the scope and complexity of imaging technology steadily increase, more advanced techniques are required to solve the emerging cha