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Nature Apr 2008
Topics: Anatomy; Animals; Cetacea; History, 20th Century; History, 21st Century; New York City
PubMed: 18385709
DOI: 10.1038/452525a -
Indian Journal of Dental Research :... 2008
Topics: Anatomy; Curriculum; Education, Dental; Humans; India; Tooth
PubMed: 18797090
DOI: 10.4103/0970-9290.42946 -
Anticancer Research Aug 2016
Topics: Anatomy; Animals; Book Reviews as Topic; Histology
PubMed: 27466570
DOI: No ID Found -
Annual Review of Biomedical Engineering 2015The Computational Anatomy project is the morphome-scale study of shape and form, which we model as an orbit under diffeomorphic group action. Metric comparison... (Review)
Review
The Computational Anatomy project is the morphome-scale study of shape and form, which we model as an orbit under diffeomorphic group action. Metric comparison calculates the geodesic length of the diffeomorphic flow connecting one form to another. Geodesic connection provides a positioning system for coordinatizing the forms and positioning their associated functional information. This article reviews progress since the Euler-Lagrange characterization of the geodesics a decade ago. Geodesic positioning is posed as a series of problems in Hamiltonian control, which emphasize the key reduction from the Eulerian momentum with dimension of the flow of the group, to the parametric coordinates appropriate to the dimension of the submanifolds being positioned. The Hamiltonian viewpoint provides important extensions of the core setting to new, object-informed positioning systems. Several submanifold mapping problems are discussed as they apply to metamorphosis, multiple shape spaces, and longitudinal time series studies of growth and atrophy via shape splines.
Topics: Anatomy; Animals; Biomedical Engineering; Brain; Computational Biology; Heart Ventricles; Humans; Imaging, Three-Dimensional; Mathematical Concepts; Metamorphosis, Biological; Models, Anatomic; Models, Cardiovascular; Models, Neurological; Neuroimaging
PubMed: 26643025
DOI: 10.1146/annurev-bioeng-071114-040601 -
Lab Animal Aug 2019
Topics: Anatomy; Anatomy, Comparative; Animals; Eulipotyphla; Vertebrates
PubMed: 31285629
DOI: 10.1038/s41684-019-0355-1 -
Srpski Arhiv Za Celokupno Lekarstvo Jul 1981
Topics: Anatomy; Histology; Terminology as Topic
PubMed: 7345631
DOI: No ID Found -
The American Journal of Anatomy Mar 1966
Topics: Anatomy; Cranial Nerves; Greece, Ancient; History, Ancient; Humans; Nervous System; Neurology; Spinal Nerves; Sympathetic Nervous System; Trigeminal Nerve
PubMed: 5331130
DOI: 10.1002/aja.1001180202 -
Vision Research 1977
Topics: Anatomy; Germany; History, 19th Century; Humans; Ophthalmology; Retina; Retinal Pigments
PubMed: 345608
DOI: 10.1016/0042-6989(77)90112-2 -
Bulletin de L'Academie Nationale de... Dec 1990
Topics: Aging; Anatomy; Anthropometry; Bone and Bones; Central Nervous System; Humans
PubMed: 2094561
DOI: No ID Found -
Clinical Anatomy (New York, N.Y.) May 2015Rectal wall valves are obscure anatomic parts that rarely are considered in current medical practice. Yet from the seminal analysis of them in the early nineteenth...
Rectal wall valves are obscure anatomic parts that rarely are considered in current medical practice. Yet from the seminal analysis of them in the early nineteenth century by the Irish anatomist and surgeon, John Houston, their structure, purpose, and clinical significance were topics of surprising disagreement. Were they true structures? What function might they have? Did disease originate in rectal valves? Were special operations required for any such diseases? Because Houston's anatomic analyses of rectal valves were substantiated, they came to be known in the English literature as the Spiral Rectal Valves of Houston. In the mid-nineteenth century, a single mid-rectal valve was described by the Hanoverian, Otto Kohlrausch., creating confusion with the established eponym "Houston's Valves." Many hypotheses about rectal valves have been discredited; and their physiologic functions are still unknown.
Topics: Anatomy; History, 18th Century; Humans; Rectum
PubMed: 25220837
DOI: 10.1002/ca.22462