- #DOWNLOAD SLICER 3D DATA ZIP FILE#
- #DOWNLOAD SLICER 3D DATA REGISTRATION#
- #DOWNLOAD SLICER 3D DATA SERIES#
- #DOWNLOAD SLICER 3D DATA TV#
#DOWNLOAD SLICER 3D DATA TV#
One clip that came to mind was one from Downtown’s Gaki no Tsukai TV show from 12 years ago. (Their’s is not the only example on Japanese TV of people being put in painful situations to illicit laughs put certainly the most popular.) Countless clips of Downtown shows and other programs have made their way on to YouTube and other social media, gathering a fanbase outside Japan as well. If they laugh in these situations, they are then beaten by the show’s staff of masked enforcers with a swift bat to the butt. The show features the comedians going through different set situations where they are surprised by something or someone. The organization says that it continuously receives complaints on such programs with opinions like “It makes me feel uncomfortable” and “It promotes bullying.” Although the article and the organization does not mention any specific shows, those on social media immediately thought of the impact this would have on the popular New Years Eve special featuring the comedic duo Downtown, “24 Jikan Waratte wa Ikenai” (Basically “You can’t laugh for 24 hours”). This entry was posted in 3D Imaging on Apby maga.According to an article on NHK, the BPO (Broadcasting Ethics & Programming Improvement Organization) has decided to deliberate on the production of programs where hurting the performers is used as fodder for laughs, considering the impact this may have on young people. Remember to save your resultant dataset as Nifti or NRRD. Once it is loaded, you can cross reference the metadata (namely image dimensions and spacing) from MorphoSource to the values reported by the Volume module. Once DICOM browser completes the import, you should now have a record called Saimiri_201870000.dcm click on it and hit load. Notice how slow it is now importing (as it should, this is a massive 3GB dataset). Once patching is completed, you can use the DICOM browser to import the patched dataset.
#DOWNLOAD SLICER 3D DATA SERIES#
This will recreate the DICOM series in the specified folder. Make sure Generate missing patient/study/series ID is checked and hit Patch. To fix this problem, open the DICOM Patcher module, specify Saimiri_20187 folder as the DICOM Input, and choose an output folder. It complains about dataset missing the patient and study name, as well as an Unknown DICOM tag. If you scroll down, you should see error messages labeled critical. We can dig further on the root cause of the problem by hitting CTRL+0 and bringing the Log Messages dialog box. Slicer will begin loading the DICOM series, and eventually will display a message saying 0 Patient/Studies/Series were imported. This is really a moot point, as in the end we will save the dataset as NRRD or NII, which are far more suitable for our purposes than image sequences. If you choose the latter, and later change or remove the location of Saimiri_20187 folder, you won’t be able to reload your data. You can either choose to incorporate the DICOM sequence into the DICOM database or simply link the files. Open the DICOM module, Click Import and navigate a few folders down to the Saimiri_20187 folder, and hit OK.
#DOWNLOAD SLICER 3D DATA ZIP FILE#
The solution here is based on the response from the Andras Lasso (Thanks Andras!).ĭownload the zip file (1.9GB) and unzip it to a folder. I also chose MorphoSource, because recently a user had issues getting the data into Slicer.
#DOWNLOAD SLICER 3D DATA REGISTRATION#
Registration is well worth the hassle, as it provides thousands of scanned vertebrate specimens in a very nicely curated manner. You may have to register for the site to download the data. For the ones that fail, DICOM patcher can be used to strip the meta data portion of DICOM and just load the image.įor this tutorial, I will use a DICOM series from the excellent MorphoSource repository ( ). It should read almost all well-structured DICOM series. Slicer has a robust DICOM import/export module. While it is a standard, manufacturers of imaging equipment implemented the format in different ways, which can be a amajor headache.
DICOM is a standard image data format that is designed to facilitate data exchange between medical imaging facilities.