| M. Weinstein and J. I. Epstein. Telepathology diagnosis of prostate needle biopsies. Human Pathology, 28(1):22--29, Jan. 1997. |
....Michael D. Beynon is currently at MIT Lincoln Laboratory. Over the past 10 years, there has been increasing interest in technologies that make it possible to examine specimens at a distance. There are currently two forms of telepathology imaging: static and dynamic [13] 30] 37] [38], 39] In staticimage telepathology, the referring pathologist captures a small set of digital images that are transmitted to the consultant. The consulting pathologist relies on the referring pathologist to select tissue fields. In the dynamic mode, live images of microscope slides are ....
M. Weinstein and J. I. Epstein. Telepathology diagnosis of prostate needle biopsies. Human Pathology, 28(1):22--29, Jan. 1997.
....of suitable resolution (governed by the desired magnification) and appropriately compositing pixels mapping onto a single grid point, to avoid introducing spurious artifacts into the displayed image. Used in this manner, the Virtual Microscope can support completely digital dynamic telepathology [30, 41, 42]. In addition, it enables new modes of behavior that cannot be achieved with a physical microscope, such as simultaneous viewing and manipulation of a single slide by multiple users. Water contamination studies: Powerful simulation tools are crucial to understand and predict transport and ....
M. Weinstein and J. I. Epstein. Telepathology diagnosis of prostate needle biopsies. Human Pathology, 28(1):22--29, Jan. 1997.
....the remote pathology consultant can control the stage and actively select the image to be viewed. In static mode, the referring pathologist captures a small set of images to be transmitted to the consultant. A variety of static, dynamic and hybrid forms of telepathology have been demonstrated [3, 4]. In these terms, the Virtual Microscope is best described as a form of completely digital dynamic telepathology. The Virtual Microscope represents a larger class of applications that involve browsing large multi dimensional datasets, for example analyzing remote sensing data or visualizing the ....
Michael Weinstein and Jonathan I. Epstein. Telepathology diagnosis of prostate needle biopsies. Human Pathology, 28(1):22--29, January 1997.
....full microscope slides under high power. At the basic level, it can emulate the usual behavior of a physical microscope including continuously moving the stage and changing magnification and focus. Used in this manner, the Virtual Microscope can support completely digital dynamic telepathology [30, 41, 42]. In addition, it enables new modes of behavior that cannot be achieved with a physical microscope, such as simultaneous viewing and manipulation of a single slide by multiple users. Pathologists and biomedical researchers need to process as well as view microscopy data. There is a need for three ....
M. Weinstein and J. I. Epstein. Telepathology diagnosis of prostate needle biopsies. Human Pathology, 28(1):22--29, Jan. 1997.
....pathologist captures a small set of digital images that are transmitted to the consultant. The consulting pathologist relies on the referring pathologist to select tissue fields. A variety of telepathology projects have demonstrated the use of static, dynamic and hybrid forms of telepathology [2, 3]. In these terms, the Virtual Microscope can best be described as a form of completely digital dynamic telepathology. The rest of this paper concentrates on the technical challenges that must be addressed to effectively support the functionality of the Virtual Microscope, and describes the design ....
Michael Weinstein and Jonathan I. Epstein. Telepathology diagnosis of prostate needle biopsies. Human Pathology, 28(1):22--29, January 1997.
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