Ask Mar
Moderator: Zulus Thousand of em
Ask Mar
Saw this on a different forum and thought i'd apply the same thing here.
So, stuck in a dead end job, coursework getting you down, is that special someone beginning to look more and more like they've had the cheese off the mouse trap?
Having problems, come share it with thewanderer and Ask Mar.
So, stuck in a dead end job, coursework getting you down, is that special someone beginning to look more and more like they've had the cheese off the mouse trap?
Having problems, come share it with thewanderer and Ask Mar.
but ur not riding me!!!!Mar wrote:Ratbert,
I understand your hesitance for many fear the unicorn. I suggest you start slow, gnomes, dwarves, elves and gain a bit of momentum before attempting the leapfrog with a unicorn.
Nay-Nay: so good they named me twice
"oh Nicky Hunt, should play up front, oh Nicky Hunt should play up front"
"oh Nicky Hunt, should play up front, oh Nicky Hunt should play up front"
Gnome,
I too don't understand, but if you're still struggling at the end of the coursework, blag these (and play leapfrog with ratbert)..
hyalinized arterioles and globally sclerotic glomeruli
Hyalinized arterioles and sclerotic glomeruli.
Atrophy of tubules
While your problem is quite a hard one, detecting what the image extraction retrieves from the image is even harder.
My suggestion is to take the glomeruli, detect where the blood vessels pass from and go to whilst filtering urine from the blood and then actually highlighting that section of the image with a pen or whatever. You'll have the glomeruli, then look over what effects hyalanization (sp?) has and search some them, you may wish to check the normal working of the glomeruli and compare it that way, usually with things like this the differences with the image usually just highlight what it is your looking for, regardless of other problems associated with the body in question.
References:
www.pathology.vcu.edu/ education/renal/lab2.b.html
erl.pathology.iupui.edu/ C603/GENERA1.HTM
erl.pathology.iupui.edu/ C603/GENE664.HTM
I too don't understand, but if you're still struggling at the end of the coursework, blag these (and play leapfrog with ratbert)..
hyalinized arterioles and globally sclerotic glomeruli
Hyalinized arterioles and sclerotic glomeruli.
Atrophy of tubules
While your problem is quite a hard one, detecting what the image extraction retrieves from the image is even harder.
My suggestion is to take the glomeruli, detect where the blood vessels pass from and go to whilst filtering urine from the blood and then actually highlighting that section of the image with a pen or whatever. You'll have the glomeruli, then look over what effects hyalanization (sp?) has and search some them, you may wish to check the normal working of the glomeruli and compare it that way, usually with things like this the differences with the image usually just highlight what it is your looking for, regardless of other problems associated with the body in question.
References:
www.pathology.vcu.edu/ education/renal/lab2.b.html
erl.pathology.iupui.edu/ C603/GENERA1.HTM
erl.pathology.iupui.edu/ C603/GENE664.HTM
My t'other half would cause far more damage than a unicorn if I was!!Gnome wrote:but ur not riding me!!!!Mar wrote:Ratbert,
I understand your hesitance for many fear the unicorn. I suggest you start slow, gnomes, dwarves, elves and gain a bit of momentum before attempting the leapfrog with a unicorn.
- officer_dibble
- Immortal
- Posts: 14028
- Joined: Sun Oct 17, 2004 9:33 pm
- Location: Leeds
Gnome,
I figured you would've picked them off google. I just needed something to supplement the processes I was describing.
My degree course often leaves me getting stuck on something as simple as a typo and correcting everything else in an effort to sort it out. Sufficet to say its very annoying. Anyway to make it easier and to sort things out its better to look at what is actually making up the thing you are working with.
In IR programs (Image Recognition) the processes that are used for medicinal analyses involve taking a completely healthy state and applying a damaged version over the top of it. What emerges are certain definite objects such as lungs, heart, artrial pathways and so on. What is easy to notice from the damaged version is the difficulty when processing the image, so the program goes off shapes, positional locations, etc. You should try these processes.
After its found the place where its supposed to be it applies the next scan from the previous image and uses object recognition algorithms (much in the same way Optical Character Recognition software works) to do an increased analysis on the object, although the shapes are much harder to detect it gives a rough outline and tries displaying the nearest match it can find.
Due to the unreliability and pretty much fledgling IR programs that are currently out, they're only used as a basis to make it easier on the areas that the doctor needs to focus on.
My suggestion is to you, print off the image (if possible), and remove all the sections that are unneccesary until you've found what exactly your supposed to be looking at. If you can't find an image that you require, look up the definitions and appropriate areas you are focusing on and describe what happens with reference to a completely healthy image. Even if you can't display whats happening you can always make the reader of your assignment believe you know what youre talking about.
If you're still stuck try asking colleagues or friends and describing it to them or asking for help, that usually works for me.
And if you're still stuck for that, think sod it and go and do something more constructive for a bit.
I figured you would've picked them off google. I just needed something to supplement the processes I was describing.
My degree course often leaves me getting stuck on something as simple as a typo and correcting everything else in an effort to sort it out. Sufficet to say its very annoying. Anyway to make it easier and to sort things out its better to look at what is actually making up the thing you are working with.
In IR programs (Image Recognition) the processes that are used for medicinal analyses involve taking a completely healthy state and applying a damaged version over the top of it. What emerges are certain definite objects such as lungs, heart, artrial pathways and so on. What is easy to notice from the damaged version is the difficulty when processing the image, so the program goes off shapes, positional locations, etc. You should try these processes.
After its found the place where its supposed to be it applies the next scan from the previous image and uses object recognition algorithms (much in the same way Optical Character Recognition software works) to do an increased analysis on the object, although the shapes are much harder to detect it gives a rough outline and tries displaying the nearest match it can find.
Due to the unreliability and pretty much fledgling IR programs that are currently out, they're only used as a basis to make it easier on the areas that the doctor needs to focus on.
My suggestion is to you, print off the image (if possible), and remove all the sections that are unneccesary until you've found what exactly your supposed to be looking at. If you can't find an image that you require, look up the definitions and appropriate areas you are focusing on and describe what happens with reference to a completely healthy image. Even if you can't display whats happening you can always make the reader of your assignment believe you know what youre talking about.
If you're still stuck try asking colleagues or friends and describing it to them or asking for help, that usually works for me.
And if you're still stuck for that, think sod it and go and do something more constructive for a bit.
- officer_dibble
- Immortal
- Posts: 14028
- Joined: Sun Oct 17, 2004 9:33 pm
- Location: Leeds
Dibble,
You're not leaving yourself with easy options here, other than getting a job you can try these simple money saving tools:
The 2nd birthday. Simple, yet effective.
The friendly get together. Drinks are cheaper from the shop and if you set out later, you'll be half wasted anyway.
The forgot my wallet technique, disgraceful yet if you make it up after you've got your job you can probably pull this one off a bit more.
The lady-friends, always an eye-pleaser, get two girls to tease and ask for pints for you, and in reward the pizza faced teen gets to see a lesbian kiss, well, you're onto a good thing especially if they're good looking.
and last but not least..
The money run, got a hat you wish to trade? i'm sure that beggar does!
You're not leaving yourself with easy options here, other than getting a job you can try these simple money saving tools:
The 2nd birthday. Simple, yet effective.
The friendly get together. Drinks are cheaper from the shop and if you set out later, you'll be half wasted anyway.
The forgot my wallet technique, disgraceful yet if you make it up after you've got your job you can probably pull this one off a bit more.
The lady-friends, always an eye-pleaser, get two girls to tease and ask for pints for you, and in reward the pizza faced teen gets to see a lesbian kiss, well, you're onto a good thing especially if they're good looking.
and last but not least..
The money run, got a hat you wish to trade? i'm sure that beggar does!
- officer_dibble
- Immortal
- Posts: 14028
- Joined: Sun Oct 17, 2004 9:33 pm
- Location: Leeds
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: Google [Bot] and 113 guests