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TMI
1998

Predicting error in rigid-body, point-based registration

13 years 11 months ago
Predicting error in rigid-body, point-based registration
— Guidance systems designed for neurosurgery, hip surgery, and spine surgery, and for approaches to other anatomy that is relatively rigid can use rigid-body transformations to accomplish image registration. These systems often rely on point-based registration to determine the transformation, and many such systems use attached fiducial markers to establish accurate fiducial points for the registration, the points being established by some fiducial localization process. Accuracy is important to these systems, as is knowledge of the level of that accuracy. An advantage of marker-based systems, particularly those in which the markers are bone-implanted, is that registration error depends only on the fiducial localization error (FLE) and is thus to a large extent independent of the particular object being registered. Thus, it should be possible to predict the clinical accuracy of marker-based systems on the basis of experimental measurements made with phantoms or previous patients. T...
J. Michael Fitzpatrick, Jay B. West, Calvin R. Mau
Added 23 Dec 2010
Updated 23 Dec 2010
Type Journal
Year 1998
Where TMI
Authors J. Michael Fitzpatrick, Jay B. West, Calvin R. Maurer Jr.
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