Paper
1 March 1974 Bio-Medical Applications Of A Holographic System For Automatic Surface Mapping
Aaron D. Gara, Rrichard F. Majkowski, Robert P. Hubbard, Donald G. McLeod, Thomas T. Stapleton
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
A holographic image projection and tracking system has been developed which can automatically map a surface with high precision. To illustrate the potential usefulness of this technique to bio-medical applications, point coordinate data for preselected points and automatically scanned surface profile data has been taken of a skull geometry model. The model is representative of the average American male. System design studies on this holographic technique show that 1) dimensions of objects of the order of 1 meter in size can be produced from their image to an accuracy of 1 part in 10 and 2) the precise location of the image surface can unambiguously be determined for even matte, feature-less surfaces without the need for surface preparation. The skull model data and suggestions for other bio-medical applications are presented.
© (1974) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Aaron D. Gara, Rrichard F. Majkowski, Robert P. Hubbard, Donald G. McLeod, and Thomas T. Stapleton "Bio-Medical Applications Of A Holographic System For Automatic Surface Mapping", Proc. SPIE 0040, Quantitative Imagery in the Biomedical Sciences II, (1 March 1974); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.953812
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KEYWORDS
Holograms

Skull

Holography

Data modeling

Cameras

Sensors

3D image reconstruction

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