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A 3D Computer Vision System in Radiotherapy Patient Setup

An approach to quantitatively determine patient surface contours as part of an augmented reality (AR) system for patient position and posture correction was developed.

Quantitative evaluation of the accuracy of patient positioning and posture correction requires the knowledge of coordinates of the patient contour. The system developed uses the surface contours from the planning CT data as the reference surface coordinates. The corresponding reference point cloud is displayed on screen to enable AR assisted patient positioning. A 3D computer vision system using structured light then captures the current 3D surface of the patient. The offset between the acquired surface and the reference surface, representing the desired patient position, is the alignment error.

Two codification strategies, spatial encoding, and temporal encoding, were examined. Spatial encoding methods require a single static pattern to work, thus enabling dynamic scenes to be captured. Temporal encoding methods require a set of patterns to be successively projected onto the object, the encoding for each pixel is only complete when the entire series of patterns has been projected.

The system was tested on a camera tracking object. The structured light reconstruction was accurate to within ±1 mm, ±1.5 mm, and ±4 mm in x, y, and z-directions (camera optical axis) respectively. The method was integrated into a simplified AR system and a visualization scheme based on z-direction offset was developed. A demonstration of how the final AR-3D vision hybrid system can be used in a clinical situation was given using an anatomical teaching phantom.

The system and visualisation worked well and demonstrated the proof of principal of the approach. It was found that the achieved accuracy was not yet sufficient for clinical use. Further work on improving the projector calibration accuracy is required. Both the camera registration process and 3D computer vision using structured light have been shown to be capable of sub-millimeter accuracy on their own. If that level of accuracy can be reproduced in this system, the concept presented can potentially be used in Oncology departments as a cost-effective patient setup guidance system for external beam radiotherapy, used in addition to current laser/portal imaging/cone beam CT based setup procedures.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:canterbury.ac.nz/oai:ir.canterbury.ac.nz:10092/7176
Date January 2012
CreatorsChyou, Te-yu
PublisherUniversity of Canterbury. Physics and Astronomy
Source SetsUniversity of Canterbury
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeElectronic thesis or dissertation, Text
RightsCopyright Te-yu Chyou, http://library.canterbury.ac.nz/thesis/etheses_copyright.shtml
RelationNZCU

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