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Naoki KAMIYA Xiangrong ZHOU Huayue CHEN Chisako MURAMATSU Takeshi HARA Hiroshi FUJITA
Our purpose in this study is to develop a scheme to segment the rectus abdominis muscle region in X-ray CT images. We propose a new muscle recognition method based on the shape model. In this method, three steps are included in the segmentation process. The first is to generate a shape model for representing the rectus abdominis muscle. The second is to recognize anatomical feature points corresponding to the origin and insertion of the muscle, and the third is to segment the rectus abdominis muscles using the shape model. We generated the shape model from 20 CT cases and tested the model to recognize the muscle in 10 other CT cases. The average value of the Jaccard similarity coefficient (JSC) between the manually and automatically segmented regions was 0.843. The results suggest the validity of the model-based segmentation for the rectus abdominis muscle.
Daisuke FURUKAWA Kensaku MORI Takayuki KITASAKA Yasuhito SUENAGA Kenji MASE Tomoichi TAKAHASHI
This paper proposes the design of a physically accurate spine model and its application to estimate three dimensional spine posture from the frontal and lateral views of a human body taken by two conventional video cameras. The accurate spine model proposed here is composed of rigid body parts approximating vertebral bodies and elastic body parts representing intervertebral disks. In the estimation process, we obtain neck and waist positions by fitting the Connected Vertebra Spheres Model to frontal and lateral silhouette images. Then the virtual forces acting on the top and the bottom vertebrae of the accurate spine model are computed based on the obtained neck and waist positions. The accurate model is deformed by the virtual forces, the gravitational force, and the forces of repulsion. The model thus deformed is regarded as the current posture. According to the preliminary experiments based on one real MR image data set of only one subject person, we confirmed that our proposed deformation method estimates the positions of the vertebrae within positional shifts of 3.2 6.8 mm. 3D posture of the spine could be estimated reasonably by applying the estimation method to actual human images taken by video cameras.