Skip to main content

CIALAB encouraging talented young minds with summer internships

CIALAB is pleased to introduce the three interns namely Tong Gan, Rosana Rodriguez Milanes and Michael Priddy working through summer’09.

  • Rosana Rodriguez Milanes - I am a third year undergraduate student in Electronic Engineering from Universidad del Norte, Colombia. My experience as a volunteer foreign student in the Clinical Image Analysis Laboratory has been an edifying, gratifying and enriching. Being able to participate, to learn and to collaborate in the Clinical Image Analysis Laboratory during the past two weeks has allowed me to improve my analytical and interpretative skills in processing histopathological and MRI images. I have been able to learn about segmentation, region growing, splitting and merging algorithms development. I have also had the privilege of knowing and interacting with excellent engineers who have helped me improve my skills as a foreign student. I am grateful for the opportunity that the Ohio State University has given me to collaborate and to learn with an excellent team of professionals working in the digital imaging processing field.

  • Michael Priddy - I am a medical student who just finished my first year. Graduating from Brigham Young University, most of my research experience has been in the field of History (which I received my undergraduate degree in). I will be spending the summer analyzing the relationships between cartilage, strength, muscle content and KL scores (osteoarthritis of the knee) with an emphasis on using the muscle content numbers (intramuscular fat content, lean muscle cross-sectional area, cross-sectional area of muscle with fat included, and the ratio of fat vs. muscle inside a muscle).

  • Tong Gan - I am a fourth year undergraduate student majoring in Microbiology and am interested in pursuing medical school after graduation. My research experience started with a lab assistant position in the Department of Plant and Cellular Molecular Biology of Ohio State where I learned the basics of bench research and helped various post-docs in a project discovering the basis of Circadian Rhythms in arabidopsis plants. My next research was under Dr. Thomas Best for summer credit in immunostaining rabbit muscle tissues to see the effect of massage on injured muscles. Currently, I am working on the Osteoarthritis project that entails manually segmenting the MRI medial meniscus for 160 patients and then writing a MATLAB program that measures its volume, thickness, and surface area.

Comments

  1. Google map is here for us and it is helping us to discover our direction. We realize that to utilize this application we should click to find out more internest association. This sort of association is helping us to discover puts in better way and we can achieved our predetermination in time.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Recent publications

The CIA lab has recently had 4 articles published in PLOS One and the Journal of Urology. Automated Staging Of T1 Bladder Cancer Using Digital Pathologic H&E Images: A Deep Learning approach (Journal of Urology). The paper discusses the need for accurately gauging tumor cell intrusion into Lamina Propria in an effort to substage bladder cancer. It explains how transfer learning in conjunction with Convolutional Neural Networks can be used to accurately identify different bladder layers and then compute the distance between tumor nuclei and Lamina Propria. The article is available here:  https://www.jurology.com/article/S0022-5347(18)41148-2/pdf Identifying tumor in pancreatic neuroendocrine neoplasms from Ki67 images using transfer learning (PLOS One). This paper examines a proposed methodology to automatically differentiate between NET and non-tumor regions based on images of Ki67 stained biopsies. It also uses transfer learning to exploit a rich set of features ...

CIALAB has moved to Wake Forest

The Clinical Image Analysis Lab (CIALAB) that was started by Dr. Metin Gurcan in 2005 at the Ohio State University has moved to Wake Forest School of Medicine. The new lab at Wake Forest will retain its name, but its web page will now be located at : http://tsi.wakehealth.edu/CIALab/   Dr. Gurcan was recruited as the inaugural Director of the Center for Biomedical Informatics at Wake Forest School of Medicine. The newly established Center will strengthen Wake Forest’s infrastructures for informatics research in genomics, imaging, healthcare delivery, and population health and support the informatics needs of other research centers. In so doing, the Center will promote Wake Forest Baptist Health's evolution as a learning health care system. A further goal of the Center is to train the next generation of investigators in the principles and practice of biomedical informatics.   The CIALab has been one of the leading research labs in the world and known for its innovative and ...