Believed to be a world first, the visualisations enable enhanced exploration inside the patient’s lungs, allowing the user to have a closer interaction with particular areas of interest.
The system has been developed over eight weeks by a team led by Professor Henry Duh, La Trobe’s Head of Computer Science and Information Technology.
Professor Duh said 3D modelling can show the transformation from healthy lungs to those infected by coronavirus – a sequence which is hard to pick up with 2D biomedical images - and provide a better understanding of how the virus invades the body.
“Medical imaging is indispensable to the delivery of healthcare and an essential component of clinical research. However, there is currently a lack of appropriate software to assimilate and derive maximum benefit from multimodal interactions with medical images in mixed reality environments.”
La Trobe University seeks to overcome that by building immersive medical tools using AR – the ability to superimpose 3D graphics over real-world views seen through a camera lens.
Leveraging Microsoft resources including Windows10 and HoloLens2, the University hopes the technology will one day be adopted in clinical diagnosis.
The team is now working toward using AI to automatically segment the lungs – or indeed any organs of interest – and render 3D scans from 2D medical images, to provide a deeper analysis of what it reveals.
Tiffany Wright, education director for Microsoft Australia said: “It is an absolute privilege for Microsoft to be able to support the work of pioneering technologists like Professor Duh and his team at La Trobe.
“AI and the HoloLens2 are combined here to provide insights that would be hard to grasp in any other way – and the speed at which La Trobe was able to spin up this application is extremely impressive. Starting in 2021 La Trobe is going to offer a new course – a Masters in Digital Media which will explore issues such as user experience, interaction design and virtual and mixed reality environments and this project will serve as an important beacon for new students and researchers alike.”
According to Professor Duh: “The ultimate goal of our project is to visualise the infected lungs and at the same time link to the outcomes of AI analysis. Clinicians will be able to see the analytics and interact with the model to gain insights from the system.”
ENDS
La Trobe University
Renowned for academic excellence and research endeavours La Trobe University operates a network of campuses, with more than 28,000 students at its Melbourne Campus and over 7,500 at campuses in Albury-Wodonga, Bendigo, Mildura, Melbourne City, Shepparton and Sydney.
Microsoft
Microsoft (Nasdaq “MSFT” @microsoft) enables digital transformation for the era of an intelligent cloud and an intelligent edge. Its mission is to empower every person and every organisation on the planet to achieve more.
For media enquiries, please contact:
Rudolf Wagenaar, Commercial Communications Lead, Microsoft Australia | ruwage@microsoft.com | 0439 082 550
Dragana Mrkaja, La Trobe University Media Officer | d.mrkaja@latrobe.edu.au | 0456 764 371