11.17.14
Research into disorders such as arthritis is to be helped by new software developed at the University of Manchester which automatically outlines bones –- saving thousands of hours of manual work.
Amidst a national shortage of radiographers in the United Kingdom and an increasing requirement for researchers to work with large databases of radiograph images, the software which is being funded by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council, is being designed to automatically pick out the shapes of bones in the images, rather than relying on individual researchers.
The system can already identify hips, but the researchers from the University’s Institute of Population Health now will adapt it to map out knees and hands and to be able to learn to identify other bones and structures within the body.
The funding will allow further development to ensure the system is accurate enough that it can be used in hospitals to help provide faster diagnosis of problems in patients.
“Mapping the outlines of bones from radiographs is hard work that takes time and skill. When researchers into conditions like arthritis are working with hundreds of images, it’s a very inefficient way of obtaining data," Professor of Computer Vision Tim Cootes said. “The idea of this software is to take the routine tasks out of human hands, so scientists can focus on drawing conclusions and developing treatments.”
The funding of £300,000 lasts for three years and builds on earlier work which developed software, called Bonefinder, to identify problems and find the outlines of hips. This free software has been adopted by a number of research groups, including some based in Oxford, U.K., and California.
“We have a growing problem with arthritis which affects more than 30 percent of [people] over 65 and costs around £30 billion to the UK economy every year," Cootes said. “Ultimately we want to get this technology into hospitals where it can save time and resources for the benefit of patients.”
Amidst a national shortage of radiographers in the United Kingdom and an increasing requirement for researchers to work with large databases of radiograph images, the software which is being funded by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council, is being designed to automatically pick out the shapes of bones in the images, rather than relying on individual researchers.
The system can already identify hips, but the researchers from the University’s Institute of Population Health now will adapt it to map out knees and hands and to be able to learn to identify other bones and structures within the body.
The funding will allow further development to ensure the system is accurate enough that it can be used in hospitals to help provide faster diagnosis of problems in patients.
“Mapping the outlines of bones from radiographs is hard work that takes time and skill. When researchers into conditions like arthritis are working with hundreds of images, it’s a very inefficient way of obtaining data," Professor of Computer Vision Tim Cootes said. “The idea of this software is to take the routine tasks out of human hands, so scientists can focus on drawing conclusions and developing treatments.”
The funding of £300,000 lasts for three years and builds on earlier work which developed software, called Bonefinder, to identify problems and find the outlines of hips. This free software has been adopted by a number of research groups, including some based in Oxford, U.K., and California.
“We have a growing problem with arthritis which affects more than 30 percent of [people] over 65 and costs around £30 billion to the UK economy every year," Cootes said. “Ultimately we want to get this technology into hospitals where it can save time and resources for the benefit of patients.”