Abstract
We have initiated studies towards the design and implementation of an ophthalmic augmented reality environment in order to allow for a) more precise laser treatment for ophthalmic diseases, b) teaching, c) telemedicine, and d) real-time image measurement, analysis, and comparison. The proposed system is being designed around a standard slit-lamp biomicroscope. The microscope will be interfaced to a CCD camera, and the image sent to a video capture board. A single computer workstation will coordinate image capture, registration, and display. The captured image is registered with previously stored, montaged photographic and angiographic data, with superposition facilitated by funduslandmark-based fast registration algorithms. The computer then drives a high intensity, VGA resolution video display with adjustable brightness and contrast attached to one of the oculars of the slitlamp biomicroscope. Preliminary studies with a modified binocular operating microscope interfaced to a Sun Ultral Workstation and an IBM-compatible PC demonstrates proof-of-principle. Robust, accurate fundus image montaging is accomplished with Hausdorff-distance-based methods. For photographic and angiographic data where the vessel gray levels vary from light to dark, and intensity-based correlation methods fail, image-preprocessing with smoothing, edge-detection, and thresholding facilitates registration. Non-real-time registration (∼ 0.4–4.0 CPU seconds) is achieved by non-optimized simple template matching (translation only, Matrox Inspector) or Hausdorff-distance-based (translation, rotation, and scale) algorithms performed on edge-detected fundus photographic and angiographic images, and on images of a model eye. Successful registration and image overlay of color, monochromatic, and angiographic images is demonstrated. To our knowledge, these studies represent the first investigation towards design and implementation of an ophthalmic augmented reality environment.
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Berger, J.W., Leventon, M.E., Hata, N., Wells, W., Kikinis, R. (1997). Design considerations for a computer-vision-enabled ophthalmic augmented reality environment. In: Troccaz, J., Grimson, E., Mösges, R. (eds) CVRMed-MRCAS'97. CVRMed MRCAS 1997 1997. Lecture Notes in Computer Science, vol 1205. Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg. https://doi.org/10.1007/BFb0029261
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BFb0029261
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