Physics of Medical Imaging
This conference will cover all aspects of image formation in medical imaging, including systems using ionizing radiation (x-rays, gamma rays) or non-ionizing techniques (ultrasound, optical, thermal, magnetic resonance, or magnetic particle imaging). Papers of a theoretical nature, or reporting new experimental results, or describing applications of artificial intelligence techniques are invited. Topics of particular interest include novel methods for image formation, experimental methods and results regarding image performance, algorithms for image reconstruction and correction, detector materials and electronic design, analytical and computer modeling of imaging systems, and physics of contrast media. Work directed toward the imaging of human subjects, small animals, or tissue specimens are welcome. The conference will also cover various specific imaging applications resulting from the above-mentioned general imaging framework, for example cardiovascular or neuroimaging applications.
Original papers are especially requested in the following areas (During submission, select a minimum of two topics and a maximum of three topics, in order of preference. Choose only ONE TOPIC in each CATEGORY):
Category ONE:
- 1.CT - All conventional and multi-energy CT topics (for cone beam use dedicated category)
- 1.CBCT - Cone beam CT
- 1.MAM - Imaging of the breast (any device)
- 1.MULTI – Multi modality imaging
- 1.NUC - Nuclear medical imaging innovations
- 1.RAD - Radiography
- 1.ANGIO - Angiography
- 1.MRI - Magnetic Resonance Imaging
- 1.US - Ultrasound
- 1.OPT – Optical and other non-ionizing imaging technologies.
Category TWO:
- 2.PCI - Photon counting imaging
- 2.PHS - Phase contrast imaging
- 2.RECON - Image reconstruction including CT, SPECT, PET, OCT and tomosynthesis
- 2.SMAX - Small animal or microscopic imaging
- 2.SRC - Radiation sources
- 2.XRAY - X-ray acquisition systems (sources, hardware scatter remediation, geometry)
- 2.ALG - Algorithmic developments, simulations, calibration, classification, etc. (for reconstruction and machine learning use dedicated categories)
- 2.DET - Detector technology; scintillators, photoconductors, diodes, TFT
- 2.IGI - Imaging for therapy or interventions
- 2.TSY - Tomosynthesis
- 2.DE - Dual energy
- 2.3DR - 3D recon
- 2.IQ – Noise reduction, resolution, scatter reduction
- 2.DOSE - Radiation dose, dosimetry, and dose effects.
Category THREE:
- 3.METR - Measurement methods (MTF, NPS, DQE, eDQE, gDQE, Spectra, ...)
- 3.PER - Observer or perception-based performance evaluations of systems
- 3.PHT - Work involving development of phantoms or anatomical simulation models
- 3.ML – Machine learning applied to imaging physics (reconstruction, corrections, evaluations, etc…)
- 3.VCT - Virtual clinical trial
- 3.SIM - Simulations.
POSTER AWARD
The Physics of Medical Imaging conference will feature a cum laude poster award. All posters displayed at the meeting for this conference are eligible. Posters will be evaluated at the meeting by the awards committee. The winners will be announced during the conference and the presenting author will be recognized and awarded a certificate.
What you will need to submit
- Presentation title
- Author(s) information
- Speaker biography (1000-character max including spaces)
- Abstract for technical review (200-300 words; text only)
- Summary of abstract for display in the program (50-150 words; text only)
- Keywords used in search for your paper (optional)
- Two- to four-page (not counting acknowledgements and references) supplemental file, prepared as a PDF formatted to SPIE manuscript specifications, that includes:
- Paper title
- Authors
- Description of purpose
- Method(s)
- Results
- Supporting images/tables/figures
- Conclusions
- Any new or breakthrough work to be presented
- Whether the work is being, or has been, submitted for publication or presentation elsewhere, and, if so, indicate how the submissions differ.
Note: Only original material should be submitted. Commercial papers, papers with no new research/development content, and papers with proprietary restrictions will not be accepted for presentation.