Sunday, February 21, 2010

SPIE-MI 2010, San Diego, II

I just returned from the SPIE-Medical-Imaging conference in San Diego.
Unlike last time I have been to San Diego, this time I loved the place.
Loved, loved, loved the place.

What a year of Baltimore can do.



(As usual, big pictures after the click to the original post.)

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Sunday, October 11, 2009

Rome for IEEE-IUS 2009

Finally, the pictures from the Rome conference trip together with my little boss.



As usual, hit the link for the actual slideshow.

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Tuesday, October 06, 2009

SPIE Symposium on Medical Imaging 2010

"SPIE Paper Number 7625-53 Acceptance and Manuscript Information

Dear Philipp J. Stolka,

On behalf of the chairs for the upcoming "Visualization, Image-Guided Procedures, and Modeling" conference, it is my pleasure to confirm the acceptance of your submission, "A 3D-elastography-guided system for laparoscopic partial nephrectomies." This conference is part of the SPIE Symposium on Medical Imaging which will be held February 13-18, 2010 in San Diego, California USA.

PRESENTATION DETAILS
Paper Number: 7625-53
Presentation Type: oral
Presentation Date: 16 Feb 2010
Presentation Duration: 20 minutes [...]"


This is in addition to the three other papers that got into this conference that also have my name on it... somehow.

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Sunday, July 19, 2009

Boston & ISBI 2009

The other week, I've been to Boston, MA to attend the ISBI 2009 conference together with Matthias of Fraunhofer.

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Saturday, May 02, 2009

DMIP Retreat 2009

Last Monday, the JHMI DMIP (the department where my little boss has his primary affiliation) had its annual retreat at Oregon Ridge Park north of Baltimore. Kind of Watschenfeld, only with 3x as many people and 1/3rd the available time.

PJS presented an awesome project proposal idea. However, it is still just an idea. And, PJS got an award - not for technical or scientific excellence, but for being the first on location (no, really).

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Wednesday, April 08, 2009

ISBI 2009

Dear Matthias Keil, Philipp J. Stolka, Marion Wiebel, Georgios Sakas, Elliot R. McVeigh, Russell H. Taylor, Emad Boctor,

We are happy to inform you that your paper:

#1572: ULTRASOUND AND CT REGISTRATION QUALITY: ELASTOGRAPHY VS. CLASSICAL B-MODE

has been accepted for presentation at ISBI 2009. [...]

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Saturday, January 17, 2009

The Week



This Friday, an absolute crazy week came to a close.

Starting last Thursday, when our Fraunhofer project partner Matthias from Darmstadt arrived here for a week of work, all available time was filled with projects, presentations, and food.



On Monday, the ERC-CISST lab where I am working was celebrating its 10 Year Graduation - meaning that the NSF had funded the Sonderforschungsbereich-like structure for a decade with copious amounts of money, which now ran out. However, over the course of the lab's existence, this "seeding money" had been relegated to the status of peanuts, supplemented by proportionately larger other sources of funding. Still, this anniversary was a momentous day. Everybody had their demos, presentations, and posters prepared, and lots of big people had come for a day full of talks and (free) food. My (big) boss even changed from fishing into evening attire for the occasion. The whole lab was buzzing with discussion, plenary talks, and excitement. Here at the LCSR (the name that the ERC-CISST is migrating to) it is imperative to carry a lab notebook with you all the time to jot down the sparks of inspiration and the wealth of information that you keep getting any given day.
The day ended with a dinner reception full of laudatios for Taylor, some outrageously long speeches, and a truly prime dinner.











On Wednesday, Matthias and I went to JHMI to attend a laparoscopic partial nephrectomy (removing part of the kidney due to tumor invasion). For me, it was the first operation to have witnessed from beginning to end, and definitely an experience I won't forget anytime soon. The excitement and stress level during the time-critical parts of the operation were nerve-wrecking. The whole thing took much longer than expected - over five instead of less than three hours (including preparations over ten hours) - and was conducted by one very experienced and extremely professional young doctor. Eventually the local anatomy turned out worse than expected, and so the intervention unfortunately had to be converted to a radical nephrectomy. So it came that on Wednesday evening, between 10 and 11pm, I was able to put my hands on a freshly excised, still warm human kidney for the first time.






It was much bigger than expected, redder, and softer. The cancerous lesion was clearly palpable, and the whole kidney looked very disorganized. Anatomically it looked very similar to the pig kidneys I had dissected and prepared the weeks before, so it was absolutely awesome to compare all the features I already knew to this unexpected new specimen of a very different kind.



Afterwards, we trashed our scrubs, got our clothing back, and left the hospital excited and unbelievably hungry, tired, and freezing. Until well past midnight we stayed out in a small diner near Homewood which is famous for its trashy and very scary horror-movie-like ambience which draws its power exclusively from harmless children's toys and dolls arranged in frightening compositions.

On Thursday, Emad, Matthias, and I got the chance to present our respective ultrasound-related work to an international audience of students and faculty that had assembled at the LCSR for a week-long winter school on surgical robotics. As ours is a small world, I could recognize some of the faces from my visit to the summer school in Montpellier in 2003.

After his presentation, Matthias left for Germany, the winter school frenzy wound down, no more operations, so on Friday I was able to collect my thoughts for the first time in a week. I rummaged through some old data we collected earlier that needs some post-processing, received some overdue CT data information, got some calls from the JHMI regarding still other CT scans, continued working on a publication draft, and finally got to sneak into the final-day buffet dinner reception of the crazy week's winter school. Almost no students or faculty were left, so only a hard core of JHU members and some foreign students and professors were attending.

At my table, two senior research scientist staff from my office, a Japanese professor from Tokyo University, and myself got to sit right next to each other. We shared our experiences with Japan (the Romanian one of the two researchers had worked at this professor's lab some years earlier and considers returning, the Korean one would like to go there to work, and I would, too) and then continued ruminating on the power of China, the fall of the U.S., and where to go to sit through the economic downturn. The general consensus was that hightech medical engineering might always be in high demand (or so we hope), and that Australia is a good place to go. Sure, the consensus also said that for us, it is absolutely necessary to go to Japan for work once, too - but Australia is trying hard to attract top-notch science to edge itself into the first league of research and technology nations. At first we were surprised at this finding, but then we convinced ourselves that Australian universities command a prime set of researchers, have lots of money, pay generously, search top-tier faculty, and are in general an attractive offer. It is at the end of the world, but maybe the world might come to there.

In all probability, I have forgotten a fair amount of what happened this week, but hopefully the notes above will serve (me) well enough to retain some vague scaffolding of memory.

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Tuesday, August 26, 2008

Canada 2008 - Return

Ha! The plane got delayed. Not 15 or 20 minutes, but 15 hours. Everybody got hotel vouchers, and then we passengers had to stay the night in an airport hotel.

Soon we'll start.

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Saturday, August 23, 2008

Canada 2008 - EMBC'08 and Vancouver


The EMBC'08 Conferece logo.


Canada Place, housing the Vancouver Convention and Exhibition Center.


Conference impressions (I'm looking at you, Techno!)


Almost Greece.


One of the few self portraits.


Where Canada lives.


What it lives on.

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Tuesday, June 17, 2008

EMBC 2008



Message from The Engineering in Medicine and Biology Conference Management System

Message originated by Jodi Janiszewski

Dear Mr. Stolka

Congratulations!! Your paper entitled:

First 3D Ultrasound Scanning, Planning, and Execution of
CT-free Milling Interventions with a Surgical Robot, (786)


has been accepted for presentation at the 30th Annual
International Conference of the IEEE Engineering in
Medicine and Biology Society
to be held in Vancouver,
British Columbia, Canada, 20th - 24th August, 2008.

Below are the details of your presentation:

Robotic Surgery 08: Bio-robotics; Surgical Planning and
Orthopedic Biomechanics Contributed paper

[...]

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Thursday, March 06, 2008

Watschenfeld 2008

Our workgroup has moved to the annual Watschenfeld research seminar again. There is some shaky Internet available, even.



Summer toboggan.



Arms race.



RONAF/TPS presentation (hopefully the last pre-PhD one in Watschenfeld).

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Saturday, February 02, 2008

TED: Ideas worth spreading

Surfing my usual websites, I stumbled upon a link to TED.



Named "Technology, Entertainment, Design", it's a conference held annually in Monterey, CA, hosting talks for around 50 speakers over four days. They are encouraged to give "the talk of their lives" in 18 minutes each - and they do. Ranging from science to arts and music, they are fantastically breathtaking. There is no single talk to be recommended, instead, get yourself some twenty minutes and choose one of your liking.

You're going to be spellbound.

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Thursday, January 24, 2008

Binge Conferencing

I was sent to a meeting of a German engineering society, specifically aimed at medical robotics, the other day. Since it was on short notice and using the train was therefore prohibitively expensive, I went there (to Braunschweig) by ShabuShabu.

An interesting selection of presentations, an impressive lab tour, and lots of driving. Braunschweig itself completely escaped me.



A small part of the oil refinery at Leuna, East Germany, on the way back.

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Wednesday, October 31, 2007

Natural Born Presenters


Natural Born Presenters.


Dynamic, by mistake.


Oooom me.


Some guy.


Every day, after conference, we try to get home. However, the U.S. American public transport system is ridiculously lousy. Crappy. Ridiculous.

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Tuesday, October 30, 2007

IROS 2007, San Diego - Downtown

This place is totally crazy for Halloween these days.



However, it is tilted towards religion as well. In fact, my impression is this country is trying hard to fill some void, fill some lack of ideals by putting religion in its place. To have at least something to cling to, since there is nothing else - no common history, no cultural heritage, no social ideal.



Church service and church look different here.



So do cars.



Architecture, especially functional one, is interesting at times. Most times, it is just plain functional, however. This whole country seems to be a collection of cardboard houses and concrete containers, with a few glass towers sprinkled in for good measure.





You couldn't complain about sunset, however.



Since there is no other bond between people here, it seems the armed forces are a unifying force - which means there are many displays of military power around.



Sunrise is not bad either, especially when you're jetlagged enough to actually witness it.





Hotel.



Eh... oom.



One of the most stunning things so far is the ubiquitous, absolutely thick and gorgeous lawn. It's not lawn in the sense of grass, but more in the sense of carpet. Everywhere, even next to major streets. Obviously it really is some kind of carpeting. Look at the incredibly straight border.



San Diego Metropolitan Trolley Service.



Travelling party.

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