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3D Medical Collaboration Technology to Enhance Emergency Healthcare

Two-dimensional (2D) videoconferencing has been explored widely in the past 15–20 years to support collaboration in healthcare. Two issues that arise in most evaluations of 2D videoconferencing in telemedicine are the difficulty obtaining optimal camera views and poor depth perception. To address th...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Welch, Greg, Sonnenwald, Diane H, Fuchs, Henry, Cairns, Bruce, Mayer-Patel, Ketan, Söderholm, Hanna M., Yang, Ruigang, State, Andrei, Towles, Herman, Ilie, Adrian, Ampalam, Manoj, Krishnan, Srinivas, Noel, Vincent, Noland, Michael, Manning, James E.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: University of Illinois at Chicago Library 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2850251/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19521951
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author Welch, Greg
Sonnenwald, Diane H
Fuchs, Henry
Cairns, Bruce
Mayer-Patel, Ketan
Söderholm, Hanna M.
Yang, Ruigang
State, Andrei
Towles, Herman
Ilie, Adrian
Ampalam, Manoj
Krishnan, Srinivas
Noel, Vincent
Noland, Michael
Manning, James E.
author_facet Welch, Greg
Sonnenwald, Diane H
Fuchs, Henry
Cairns, Bruce
Mayer-Patel, Ketan
Söderholm, Hanna M.
Yang, Ruigang
State, Andrei
Towles, Herman
Ilie, Adrian
Ampalam, Manoj
Krishnan, Srinivas
Noel, Vincent
Noland, Michael
Manning, James E.
author_sort Welch, Greg
collection PubMed
description Two-dimensional (2D) videoconferencing has been explored widely in the past 15–20 years to support collaboration in healthcare. Two issues that arise in most evaluations of 2D videoconferencing in telemedicine are the difficulty obtaining optimal camera views and poor depth perception. To address these problems, we are exploring the use of a small array of cameras to reconstruct dynamic three-dimensional (3D) views of a remote environment and of events taking place within. The 3D views could be sent across wired or wireless networks to remote healthcare professionals equipped with fixed displays or with mobile devices such as personal digital assistants (PDAs). The remote professionals’ viewpoints could be specified manually or automatically (continuously) via user head or PDA tracking, giving the remote viewers head-slaved or hand-slaved virtual cameras for monoscopic or stereoscopic viewing of the dynamic reconstructions. We call this idea remote 3D medical collaboration. In this article we motivate and explain the vision for 3D medical collaboration technology; we describe the relevant computer vision, computer graphics, display, and networking research; we present a proof-of-concept prototype system; and we present evaluation results supporting the general hypothesis that 3D remote medical collaboration technology could offer benefits over conventional 2D videoconferencing in emergency healthcare.
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spelling pubmed-28502512010-11-29 3D Medical Collaboration Technology to Enhance Emergency Healthcare Welch, Greg Sonnenwald, Diane H Fuchs, Henry Cairns, Bruce Mayer-Patel, Ketan Söderholm, Hanna M. Yang, Ruigang State, Andrei Towles, Herman Ilie, Adrian Ampalam, Manoj Krishnan, Srinivas Noel, Vincent Noland, Michael Manning, James E. J Biomed Discov Collab Research Two-dimensional (2D) videoconferencing has been explored widely in the past 15–20 years to support collaboration in healthcare. Two issues that arise in most evaluations of 2D videoconferencing in telemedicine are the difficulty obtaining optimal camera views and poor depth perception. To address these problems, we are exploring the use of a small array of cameras to reconstruct dynamic three-dimensional (3D) views of a remote environment and of events taking place within. The 3D views could be sent across wired or wireless networks to remote healthcare professionals equipped with fixed displays or with mobile devices such as personal digital assistants (PDAs). The remote professionals’ viewpoints could be specified manually or automatically (continuously) via user head or PDA tracking, giving the remote viewers head-slaved or hand-slaved virtual cameras for monoscopic or stereoscopic viewing of the dynamic reconstructions. We call this idea remote 3D medical collaboration. In this article we motivate and explain the vision for 3D medical collaboration technology; we describe the relevant computer vision, computer graphics, display, and networking research; we present a proof-of-concept prototype system; and we present evaluation results supporting the general hypothesis that 3D remote medical collaboration technology could offer benefits over conventional 2D videoconferencing in emergency healthcare. University of Illinois at Chicago Library 2009-04-19 /pmc/articles/PMC2850251/ /pubmed/19521951 Text en http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research
Welch, Greg
Sonnenwald, Diane H
Fuchs, Henry
Cairns, Bruce
Mayer-Patel, Ketan
Söderholm, Hanna M.
Yang, Ruigang
State, Andrei
Towles, Herman
Ilie, Adrian
Ampalam, Manoj
Krishnan, Srinivas
Noel, Vincent
Noland, Michael
Manning, James E.
3D Medical Collaboration Technology to Enhance Emergency Healthcare
title 3D Medical Collaboration Technology to Enhance Emergency Healthcare
title_full 3D Medical Collaboration Technology to Enhance Emergency Healthcare
title_fullStr 3D Medical Collaboration Technology to Enhance Emergency Healthcare
title_full_unstemmed 3D Medical Collaboration Technology to Enhance Emergency Healthcare
title_short 3D Medical Collaboration Technology to Enhance Emergency Healthcare
title_sort 3d medical collaboration technology to enhance emergency healthcare
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2850251/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19521951
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