Talk by Dr Renaud Maroy, Service Hospitalier Frederic Joliot
05 May 2010
On 10 May at Wolfson Molecular Imaging Centre
Monday 10 May, 10-11am
Ground floor seminar room
Wolfson Molecular Imaging Centre, Palatine Road
Dr Renaud Maroy works at the Service Hospitalier Frédéric Joliot, Orsay, France, one of the first centres in the world where PET imaging was developed, and funded by Pierre Joliot-Curie and named after his father, Nobel Prize laureate in 1935. Dr Maroy is a member of:
- Groupe d'acquisition et traitement de l'image (GATI) (image acquisition and analysis group)
Dr Maroy is one of the main contributors to the development of the analysis software BrainVisa/ Anatomist and has focused his research on improving ways of analysing PET images by implementation of techniques allowing automatic segmentation of region of interest, as well as methods to correct for partial volume effects.
During his presentation, he will review his most recent work on clinical and preclinical image analysis. For reference, see:
- Segmentation of Rodent Whole-Body Dynamic PET Images: An Unsupervised Method Based on Voxel Dynamics
- Fast and accurate PET preclinical data analyis: Segmentation and Partial Volume Effect correction with no anatomical priors