Dr. Martin A. Styner
Associate Professor at Univ of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
SPIE Involvement:
Author | Editor | Instructor
Area of Expertise:
Medical Image Analysis , Shape Analysis , Diffusion Tensor Imaging
Websites:
Profile Summary

Martin Styner is an assistant professor in the Department of Psychiatry with a joint appointment in the Department of Computer Science at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (UNC). As co-director of the UNC Neuro Image Research and Analysis Laboratory and associate director of the Developmental Neuroimaging Core in the Carolina Institute for Developmental Disabilities at UNC, he oversees medical imaging research projects in the field of neurodevelopment. Dr. Styner began his research in the field of medical image analysis in 1994 as a graduate student at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology ETH Zurich, Switzerland. He received his Masters in 1997 from ETH Zurich and subsequently his Ph.D. in 2001 from UNC. From 2001-2002, Dr. Styner held the position of project leader at the Duke Image Analysis Laboratory in Durham, NC. From 2002 to 2004, he founded and headed a thriving research group in Medical Image Analysis for 2 years at the M.E. Müller Research Center, University of Bern, Switzerland. In 2004, Dr. Styner joined the faculty at the University of North Carolina. He has participated in leading positions in several national and international projects with close interdisciplinary cooperation with researchers in the fields of medicine, engineering, industry and computer science. Dr. Styner has co-authored 28 papers in peer reviewed journals and 64 papers in peer reviewed conferences. He is on the editorial board of “Medical Image Analysis”, the premier journal in the field of medical image analysis. His main field of expertise is in medical image processing and analysis. He has an extensive background in anatomical structure and tissue segmentation, structural brain morphometry, modeling, atlas building, diffusion tensor imaging, small animal and primate imaging, as well as intra and inter-modality registration.
Publications (75)

Proceedings Article | 3 April 2024 Poster + Paper
Gurmeher Kaur, Crystal Soong, Martin Styner, Dimitri Trembath
Proceedings Volume 12933, 1293317 (2024) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2692954
KEYWORDS: Image segmentation, Deep learning, Biopsy, Windows, Tissues, Performance modeling, Medical imaging, Esophagus

Proceedings Article | 3 April 2023 Poster + Paper
Proceedings Volume 12464, 124643A (2023) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2654470
KEYWORDS: Quality control, Human-machine interfaces, Diffusion weighted imaging, Diffusion magnetic resonance imaging, Visualization, Neuroimaging, Diffusion, Brain, Magnetic resonance imaging, Diffusion tensor imaging

Proceedings Article | 4 April 2022 Presentation + Paper
Proceedings Volume 12036, 1203607 (2022) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2613210
KEYWORDS: Brain, Natural surfaces, Magnetic resonance imaging, Tissues, Optical inspection, Visualization, Neuroimaging, Neptunium, Inspection, Image segmentation

Proceedings Article | 4 April 2022 Presentation + Paper
Proceedings Volume 12036, 1203606 (2022) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2613201
KEYWORDS: Brain, Visualization, Diffusion, Neuroimaging, Matrices, Diffusion weighted imaging, Magnetic resonance imaging, Image segmentation, Diffusion magnetic resonance imaging, Structured optical fibers

Proceedings Article | 15 February 2021 Poster + Presentation + Paper
Proceedings Volume 11596, 115962B (2021) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2582205
KEYWORDS: Image segmentation, Image analysis, Convolutional neural networks

Showing 5 of 75 publications
Proceedings Volume Editor (4)

SPIE Conference Volume | 17 April 2017

SPIE Conference Volume | 26 July 2016

SPIE Conference Volume | 13 May 2015

SPIE Conference Volume | 25 April 2014

Conference Committee Involvement (16)
Image Processing
20 February 2023 | San Diego, California, United States
Image Processing
20 February 2022 | San Diego, California, United States
Image Processing
15 February 2021 | Online Only, California, United States
Image Processing
17 February 2020 | Houston, Texas, United States
Image Processing
19 February 2019 | San Diego, California, United States
Showing 5 of 16 Conference Committees
Course Instructor
SC1065: Exploring Brain Connectivity in-vivo: from Theory to Practice
The development of Diffusion Tensor Magnetic Resonance Imaging (DT-MRI) has opened up the possibility of studying the complex organization of the brain's white matter in-vivo. By measuring the diffusion of water molecules in tissues, the technique gives insights into the structure and orientation of major white matter pathways, and DT-MRI findings have the potential to play a critical role in the extraction of meaningful information for diagnosis, prognosis and following of treatment response. The course will guide participants through the fundamental aspects of DT-MRI data analysis, as well as the challenges of transferring cutting-edge DT-MRI techniques to clinical routine. The format will include a series of hands-on sessions with the participants running DT-MRI analysis on their own laptops, to provide a practical experience of extracting useful clinical information from Diffusion MR images. Participants will be guided through an integrated workflow for exploring the brain white matter in a series of datasets that will be provided as part of the course. The hands-on sessions will use DT-MRI tools from the NA-MIC toolkit, which include the 3DSlicer software, an open-source platform for medical image processing and 3D visualization used in biomedical and clinical research. This event is part of the on-going effort of the NIH-funded National Alliance for Medical Image Computing (NA-MIC) to transfer the latest advances in biomedical image analysis to the scientific and clinical community. <i>This course is intended as a companion to SC1063, Diffusion Imaging. Attendees will benefit maximally by attending both courses.</i>
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