| Results 451 - 500 of 912 | ||
| < 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 > | ||
|
Yanagida Toshio - - 2007
The measurements of dynamic behaviors of biomolecules in relation to their functions have been allowed using single molecule measurements. Thermal Brownian motion causes random step motion of motor proteins and structural fluctuation of protein molecules between multiple states. In hierarchic structure of life, the fluctuation is modulated. Random fluctuation is ...
|
||
|
Lombardo Thomas G - - 2006
We use molecular dynamics simulations to investigate translational and rotational diffusion in a rigid three-site model of the fragile glass former ortho-terphenyl, at 260 K< or =T< or =346 K and ambient pressure. An Einstein formulation of rotational motion is presented, which supplements the commonly used Debye model. The latter ...
|
||
|
Berbeco Ross I - - 2006
It has been noted that some lung tumors exhibit large periodic motion due to respiration. To limit the amount of dose to healthy lung tissues, many clinics have begun gating radiotherapy treatment using externally placed surrogates. It has been observed by several institutions that the end-of-exhale (EOE) tumor position is ...
|
||
|
Li Jian - - 2006
Planar motion is arguably the most dominant type of motion in surveillance videos. The constraints on motion lead to a simplified factorization method for structure from planar motion when using a stationary perspective camera. Compared with methods for general motion, our approach has two major advantages: a measurement matrix that ...
|
||
|
Jung Bernd - - 2006
PURPOSE: To detect and investigate details in left ventricular (LV) motion patterns with a temporal resolution comparable to that of echocardiography. MATERIAL AND METHODS: To assess global and regional myocardial motion in high temporal detail, respiratory-gated MR phase-contrast measurements with three-directional velocity encoding (venc) were performed in 12 healthy volunteers ...
|
||
|
Piriou Gwenaëlle - - 2006
The exploitation of video data requires methods able to extract high-level information from the images. Video summarization, video retrieval, or video surveillance are examples of applications. In this paper, we tackle the challenging problem of recognizing dynamic video contents from low-level motion features. We adopt a statistical approach involving modeling, ...
|
||
|
Alexandrowicz G - - 2006
3He spin-echo measurements are used to follow the picosecond motion of sodium atoms on a copper (001) substrate. 2D correlated motion arising from repulsive adsorbate interactions is observed for coverages as low as 0.04 ML. At coverages greater than 0.05 ML there is a pronounced onset of motion perpendicular to ...
|
||
|
Keall Paul J - - 2006
This document is the report of a task group of the AAPM and has been prepared primarily to advise medical physicists involved in the external-beam radiation therapy of patients with thoracic, abdominal, and pelvic tumors affected by respiratory motion. This report describes the magnitude of respiratory motion, discusses radiotherapy specific ...
|
||
|
Bomzon Ze'ev - - 2006
BACKGROUND: The motion and redistribution of intracellular organelles is a fundamental process in cells. Organelle motion is a complex phenomenon that depends on a large number of variables including the shape of the organelle, the type of motors with which the organelles are associated, and the mechanical properties of the ...
|
||
|
Gautam Siddharth - - 2006
Dynamics of acetylene molecules adsorbed in Na-Y zeolite cages is investigated using molecular dynamics simulation. The translational motion of the acetylene molecules is shown to involve three different time scales. "Free particle" type diffusion is observed in short time and small length scale. At long time and large length scale, ...
|
||
|
Donovan E M - - 2006
The purpose of this work was to determine the accuracy and precision of a real-time motion-tracking system (Osiris+) for the monitoring of external markers used on patients receiving radiotherapy treatments. Random and systematic errors in the system were evaluated for linear (1D), circular (2D) and elliptical (3D) continuous motions, and ...
|
||
|
Johnstone Tom - - 2006
The impact of using motion estimates as covariates of no interest was examined in general linear modeling (GLM) of both block design and rapid event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) data. The purpose of motion correction is to identify and eliminate artifacts caused by task-correlated motion while maximizing sensitivity to ...
|
||
|
Hu Weiming - - 2006
Analysis of motion patterns is an effective approach for anomaly detection and behavior prediction. Current approaches for the analysis of motion patterns depend on known scenes, where objects move in predefined ways. It is highly desirable to automatically construct object motion patterns which reflect the knowledge of the scene. In ...
|
||
|
Dineley J - - 2006
Arterial wall motion is an essential feature of a healthy cardiovascular system and it is known that wall motion is affected by age and disease. In recent years, methods have been developed for measurement of wall motion with the intention of providing diagnostically useful information. An issue with all of ...
|
||
|
Biswas Mainak - - 2006
A lot of research has been conducted on motion-compensated (MC) de-interlacing, but there are very few publications that discuss the performances of de-interlacing quantatively. The various methods are compared through their performance on known video sequences. Linear system analysis of interlaced video and de-interlacer are proposed in. It is well ...
|
||
|
Ferrage Fabien - - 2006
Internal dynamics of proteins are usually characterized by the analysis of (15)N relaxation rates that reflect the motions of NH(N) vectors. It was suggested a decade ago that additional information on backbone motions can be obtained by measuring cross-relaxation rates associated with intra-residue C'C(alpha) vectors. Here we propose a new ...
|
||
|
Webb S - - 2006
Intensity-modulated radiation therapy (IMRT) can be delivered by the 'sliding-leaves' dynamic multileaf collimator (DMLC) technique. Intrafraction organ motion can be accommodated by arranging an identical tracking motion for 'breathing leaves'. However, this is only possible for very specific circumstances such as regular, mathematically parameterizable, rigid-body, density-conserving, one-dimensional translations. In this ...
|
||
|
Zou Hong - - 2007
The relative motion of the brain with respect to the skull has been widely studied to investigate brain injury mechanisms under impacts, but the motion patterns are not yet thoroughly understood. This work analyzes brain motion patterns using the most recent and advanced experimental relative brain/skull motion data collected under ...
|
||
|
Huet Sébastien - - 2006
Analysis of trajectories of dynamical biological objects, such as breeding ants or cell organelles, is essential to reveal the interactions they develop with their environments. Many previous works used a global characterization based on parameters calculated for entire trajectories. In cases where transient behavior was detected, this usually concerned only ...
|
||
|
Park Jae Byung - - 2006
This paper introduces a navigation method for a teleoperated mobile agent (or robot) moving in an unstructured environment that includes unknown obstacles and uneven terrain, based on a guided-navigation algorithm (GNA) and a rollover-prevention algorithm (RPA). Although the mobile agent is primarily driven by an operator at a remote site, ...
|
||
|
Miloshevsky Gennady V - - 2006
The gating mechanism of the open state of the gramicidin A (gA) channel is studied by using a new Monte Carlo Normal Mode Following (MC-NMF) technique, one applicable even without a target structure. The results demonstrate that the lowest-frequency normal mode (NM) at approximately 6.5 cm(-1) is the crucial mode ...
|
||
|
George Rohini - - 2006
PURPOSE: Respiratory gating is a commercially available technology for reducing the deleterious effects of motion during imaging and treatment. The efficacy of gating is dependent on the reproducibility within and between respiratory cycles during imaging and treatment. The aim of this study was to determine whether audio-visual biofeedback can improve ...
|
||
|
Nioutsikou Elena - - 2006
The contribution of organ and tumour motion to the degradation of planned dose distributions during radiotherapy to the breathing lung has been experimentally investigated and quantified. An anthropomorphic, tissue-equivalent breathing phantom with deformable lungs has been built, in which the lung tumour can be driven in any arbitrary 3D trajectory. ...
|
||
|
Blum E K - - 2007
A biomechanical musculo-skeletal model of functional electrical stimulation (FES)-induced rat ankle motion was implemented and tested in rat experiments. The muscle model is a new Hill-based model which includes established physiological relations of force-velocity and force-length-frequency. However, the series-elastic component and the activation component of previous Hill-based models are replaced ...
|
||
|
Soares Luis Ducla - - 2006
This paper presents an original temporal shape error concealment technique based on a combination of global and local motion compensation. For this technique, which is especially useful for object-based video applications in error-prone environments (e.g., mobile networks), it is assumed that the shape of the corrupted object at hand is ...
|
||
|
Zhang J - - 2006
A detailed (2)H NMR study of a discotic monomer is reported in its columnar phase at 61.4 MHz. A simulation of angular-dependent spectral patterns and/or signal intensities of the aromatic deuterons is shown to provide information on the small step (or jump) diffusion rates in the low temperature region of ...
|
||
|
Karayiannis Nicolaos B - - 2006
PURPOSE: This study aimed at the development of a seizure-detection system by training neural networks with quantitative motion information extracted from short video segments of neonatal seizures of the myoclonic and focal clonic types and random infant movements. METHODS: The motion of the infants' body parts was quantified by temporal ...
|
||
|
Ji Hui - - 2006
We propose to combine the information from multiple motion fields by enforcing a constraint on the surface normals (3D shape) of the scene in view. The fact that the shape vectors in the different views are related only by rotation can be formulated as a rank = 3 constraint. This ...
|
||
|
Stenner Michael D - - 2006
We present a technique for phase-shifting digital in-line holography which compensates for lateral object motion. By collecting two frames of interference between object and reference fields with identical reference phase, one can estimate the lateral motion that occurred between frames using the cross-correlation. We also describe a very general linear ...
|
||
|
Karayiannis Nicolaos B - - 2006
OBJECTIVE: This study was aimed at the development of a seizure detection system by training neural networks using quantitative motion information extracted by motion segmentation methods from short video recordings of infants monitored for seizures. METHODS: The motion of the infants' body parts was quantified by temporal motion strength signals ...
|
||
|
Borgert Jörn - - 2006
This paper investigates the possibility of using the motion of a patient's anterior surface in combination with a motion model to compensate for internal respiratory motion during tracked biopsies. Position data from two electromagnetically tracked sensors, one placed on the patient's sternum, the other incorporated into a biopsy needle, were ...
|
||
|
Maletsky Lorin P - - 2007
The measurement of relative motion between two moving bones is commonly accomplished for in vitro studies by attaching to each bone a series of either passive or active markers in a fixed orientation to create a rigid body (RB). This work determined the accuracy of motion between two RBs using ...
|
||
|
Yu Weichuan - - 2006
In this paper, we studied the problem of feature-based motion tracking in echocardiographic image sequences. We described the relation between possible feature variations and different kinds of tissue motion using a linear convolution model. We also showed that motion-feature decorrelation (which means that the motion parameters estimated using feature tracking ...
|
||
|
Webb S - - 2006
When a correction for intrafraction organ motion is to be attempted using the dynamic multileaf collimator (DMLC) 'breathing leaves' technique for intensity-modulated radiotherapy (IMRT), there is a finite response time between the measurement of organ motion and the feeding of a corresponding corrective motion to the leaves. Whilst small this ...
|
||
|
Raj Ashish - - 2006
Time-resolved contrast enhanced magnetic resonance angiography (MRA) may suffer from involuntary patient motion. It is noted that while MR signal change associated with motion is large in magnitude and has smooth phase variation in k-phase, signal change associated with vascular enhancement is small in magnitude and has rapid phase variation ...
|
||
|
Kim Byung S - - 2006
Removing the motion artifacts from measured photoplethysmography (PPG) signals is one of the important issues to be tackled for the accurate measurement of arterial oxygen saturation during movement. In this paper, the motion artifacts were reduced by exploiting the quasi-periodicity of the PPG signal and the independence between the PPG ...
|
||
|
Webb S - - 2006
Intrafraction organ motion disturbs the otherwise highly conformal dose distributions planned for conformal radiotherapy and intensity-modulated radiotherapy. If the organ motions are rigid-body translations and preserve voxel density, techniques to make the beam follow the target by synchronous breathing can be arranged. Several potential difficulties disturb this oversimple statement and ...
|
||
|
Appignanesi G A - - 2006
We use molecular dynamics computer simulations to investigate the local motion of the particles in a supercooled binary liquid. Using the concept of the distance matrix, we find that the alpha relaxation corresponds to a small number of crossings from one metabasin to a neighboring one. Each crossing is very ...
|
||
|
Anderson Keith - - 2006
A fully automated, multistage system for real-time recognition of facial expression is presented. The system uses facial motion to characterize monochrome frontal views of facial expressions and is able to operate effectively in cluttered and dynamic scenes, recognizing the six emotions universally associated with unique facial expressions, namely happiness, sadness, ...
|
||
|
Schuster Guido M - - 2006
The introduction of Video Objects (VOs) is one of the innovations of MPEG-4. The alpha-plane of a VO defines its shape at a given instance in time and hence determines the boundary of its texture. In packet-based networks, shape, motion, and texture are subject to loss. While there has been ...
|
||
|
Kurkcuoglu Ozge - - 2006
The internal dynamics of triosephosphate isomerase have been investigated with elastic networks, with and without a substrate bound. The slowest modes of motion involve large domain motions but also a loop motion that conforms to the changes observed between the crystal structures and . Our computations confirm that the different ...
|
||
|
Marquet Fabrice - - 2006
A method for tracking locally the 3D motion of biological tissues is developed and applied to the correction of motion during high intensity focused ultrasound (HIFU) therapy. The motion estimation technique is based on an accurate ultrasonic speckle tracking method. A pulse-echo sequence is performed for a subset of the ...
|
||
|
Lu Hongjing - - 2006
We used Pearson's correlation to compute dynamic classification images of biological motion in a point-light display. Observers discriminated whether a human figure that was embedded in dynamic white Gaussian noise was walking forward or backward. Their responses were correlated with the Gaussian noise fields frame by frame, across trials. The ...
|
||
|
Bebek Ozkan - - 2006
Robotics technology promises an enhanced way of performing off-pump coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) surgery. In the robotic-assisted CABG surgery, surgeon performs the operation with intelligent robotic instruments controlled through teleoperation that replace conventional surgical tools. The robotic tools actively cancel the relative motion between the surgical instruments and the ...
|
||
|
Dempere-Marco Laura - - 2006
Haemodynamics, and in particular wall shear stress, is thought to play a critical role in the progression and rupture of intracranial aneurysms. A novel method is presented that combines image-based wall motion estimation obtained through non-rigid registration with computational fluid dynamics (CFD) simulations in order to provide realistic intra-aneurysmal flow ...
|
||
|
Huber Steffen - - 2006
One of the limiting factors for high resolution magnetic resonance coronary angiography (MRCA) is the motion of the heart during breathing. Current approaches use mainly motion correction in one dimension. We aimed to determine the relation between diaphragmatic motion and cardiac motion as well as the potential influence from external ...
|
||
|
Nagata Kentaro - - 2006
In this paper, we describe the human-interface equipment using surface electromyogram (SEMG) based on optimal measurement channels for each subject. In case the SEMG is used as a control signal, individual differences of SEMG are important issue to obtain high accuracy recognition of motions. To solve this problem, we propose ...
|
||
|
Salcudean S E - - 2006
We present an ultrasound vibro-elastography system designed to acquire viscoelastic properties of the prostate and peri-prostatic tissue. An excitation stage imparts low-frequency (<20 Hz), limited amplitude (< +/- 2 mm), broadband vibratory motion to an endorectal transducer, along a radial/transversal direction. The induced tissue motion is estimated from ultrasound radio-frequency ...
|
||
|
Yeo Desmond T B - - 2006
Head motion is a significant source of error in fMRI activation detection and a common approach is to apply 3D volumetric rigid body motion correction techniques. However, in 2D multislice fMRI, each slice may have a distinct set of motion parameters due to inter-slice motion. Here, we apply an automated ...
|
||
|
Wood Levi B - - 2006
This paper investigates the validity of utilizing Widrow's Active Noise Cancellation (ANC) in the context of motion artifact reduction for photoplethysmogram (PPG) sensors. The ANC approach has previously been applied to the PPG problem, but little consideration has been given to the validity of the ANC signal corruption assumptions and ...
|
||
| < 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 > | ||