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P. P. Smyth, C. J. Taylor, and J. E. Adams, "Automatic measurement of vertebral shape using active shape models," in Proc. Br. Machine Vision Conf., 1996, pp. 705--714.

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Constructing 2D Curve Atlases - Sebastian, Crisco, Klein, Kimia   (Correct)

....of the two images is computed, and in the second step an elastic warping is done so that the corresponding points are aligned. This approach assumes that the correspondence between boundary points can be found by uniform scaling and and bending, which can fails in abnormal brains. Taylor et al. [14] use Active Shape Models which represent the shape as a mean (average) shape plus a set of linearly independent variation modes that are dereived using a training set. These models are effective in a variety of applications [14] However, they do not adequately represent low frequecy (for e:g: ....

....and and bending, which can fails in abnormal brains. Taylor et al. 14] use Active Shape Models which represent the shape as a mean (average) shape plus a set of linearly independent variation modes that are dereived using a training set. These models are effective in a variety of applications [14]. However, they do not adequately represent low frequecy (for e:g: diseased) states. Christensen et al. 11] superimpose an extrinsic coordinate system on the anatomy and model its displacement field to capture shape variations of human brains. They use the images generated from a normal subject ....

P. Smyth, C. Taylor, and J. Adams. Automatic measurement of vertebral shape using active shape models. In BMVC 96, pages 9--12, 1996.


Modelling Collective Animal Behaviour using Extended.. - Sumpter, Boyle, Tillett (1997)   (9 citations)  (Correct)

....In the case of classifying an individual animal, the use of a non rigid, deformable model to describe the shape of the subject would seem a sensible choice. One such model, the Point Distribution Model (PDM) 6] forms the basis of many successful computer vision applications, for example [7, 8, 9]. Modelling the observed shape change of the animal would be comparable to that of modelling a human [10] Figure 1: Typical image, taken from video sequence However, in this paper we consider the problem of modelling a group of animals, in particular how the shape change of the group varies ....

P.P. Smyth, C.J. Taylor, and J.E. Adams. Automatic measurement of vertebral shape using active shape models. In Proceedings British Machine Vision Conference, pages 705--714, 1996.


Statistical Models of Appearance for Medical Image Analysis.. - Cootes, Taylor (2001)   (16 citations)  Self-citation (Taylor)   (Correct)

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P. P. Smyth, C. J. Taylor, and J. E. Adams, "Automatic measurement of vertebral shape using active shape models," in 7 British Machine Vison Conference, pp. 705--714, BMVA Press, (Edinburgh, Scotland), Sept. 1996.


Statistical Models of Appearance for Medical Image Analysis.. - Cootes, Taylor (2001)   (16 citations)  Self-citation (Taylor)   (Correct)

No context found.

P. P. Smyth, C. J. Taylor, and J. E. Adams, \Automatic measurement of vertebral shape using active shape models," in 7 th British Machine Vison Conference, pp. 705-714, BMVA Press, (Edinburgh, Scotland), Sept. 1996.


The Use of Active Shape Models for Making.. - Solloway.. (1997)   (11 citations)  Self-citation (Taylor)   (Correct)

....in ways in which the objects have been observed to deform in the training set global shape constraints are applied. A multi resolution version of this search process has been found to produce more accurate results [22] ASMs have been applied successfully to image analysis problems in medicine [23 27] and industry [28] The details of both shape and gray level modelling have been described in [21] In this paper, we describe a study performed to test the feasibility of using an ASM to segment the femoral cartilage from T 1 weighted images of the human knee. We also describe a technique for ....

P. P. Smyth, C. J. Taylor, J. E. Adams, Automatic Measurement of Vertebral Shape Using Active Shape Models. In 7 th British Machine Vision Conference, 705--714, Edinburgh, Scotland (Sep. 1996), BMVA Press.


Active Shape Model Segmentation with Optimal Features - van Ginneken, Frangi.. (2002)   (4 citations)  (Correct)

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P. P. Smyth, C. J. Taylor, and J. E. Adams, "Automatic measurement of vertebral shape using active shape models," in Proc. Br. Machine Vision Conf., 1996, pp. 705--714.


Active Shape Model Segmentation Using a Non-Linear .. - de Bruijne, van.. (2003)   (Correct)

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P. Smyth, C. Taylor, and J. Adams, "Automatic measurement of vertebral shape using active shape models," Image and Vision Computing, vol. 15, no. 8, pp. 575--581, 1997.

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