Gregory F Welch, Diane H Sonnenwald, Henry Fuchs, Bruce Cairns, Ketan Mayer-Patel, Hanna M Söderholm, Ruigang Yang, Andrei State, Herman Towles, Adrian Ilie, Manoj K Ampalam, Srinivas Krishnan, Vincent Noel, Michael Noland, James E Manning
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引用次数: 0
摘要
二维(2D)视频会议在过去的 15-20 年间得到了广泛的应用,以支持医疗保健领域的协作。在对远程医疗中的二维视频会议进行的大多数评估中都出现了两个问题,即难以获得最佳的摄像机视角和深度知觉较差。为了解决这些问题,我们正在探索使用小型摄像机阵列来重建远程环境和内部事件的动态三维(3D)视图。三维视图可通过有线或无线网络发送给配备固定显示器或个人数字助理(PDA)等移动设备的远程医疗保健专业人员。远程专业人员的视点可通过用户头部或掌上电脑的跟踪进行手动或自动(连续)指定,从而为远程查看者提供头部或手部虚拟摄像头,以单镜或立体方式查看动态重构。我们将这种想法称为远程 3D 医学协作。在这篇文章中,我们提出并解释了三维医疗协作技术的愿景;介绍了相关的计算机视觉、计算机图形学、显示和网络研究;展示了概念验证原型系统;并介绍了支持三维远程医疗协作技术可在紧急医疗保健中提供优于传统二维视频会议的一般假设的评估结果。
3D medical collaboration technology to enhance emergency healthcare.
Two-dimensional (2D) videoconferencing has been explored widely in the past 15-20 years to support collaboration in healthcare. Two issues that arise in most evaluations of 2D videoconferencing in telemedicine are the difficulty obtaining optimal camera views and poor depth perception. To address these problems, we are exploring the use of a small array of cameras to reconstruct dynamic three-dimensional (3D) views of a remote environment and of events taking place within. The 3D views could be sent across wired or wireless networks to remote healthcare professionals equipped with fixed displays or with mobile devices such as personal digital assistants (PDAs). The remote professionals' viewpoints could be specified manually or automatically (continuously) via user head or PDA tracking, giving the remote viewers head-slaved or hand-slaved virtual cameras for monoscopic or stereoscopic viewing of the dynamic reconstructions. We call this idea remote 3D medical collaboration. In this article we motivate and explain the vision for 3D medical collaboration technology; we describe the relevant computer vision, computer graphics, display, and networking research; we present a proof-of-concept prototype system; and we present evaluation results supporting the general hypothesis that 3D remote medical collaboration technology could offer benefits over conventional 2D videoconferencing in emergency healthcare.