Data set for "Quantitative segmentation of fluorescence microscopy images of heterogeneous tissue: Application to the detection of residual disease in tumor margins"
Abstract
This is data that is published in the article "Quantitative segmentation of fluorescence
microscopy images of heterogeneous tissue: Application to the detection of residual
disease in tumor margins".
Type
Other articlePermalink
https://hdl.handle.net/10161/6378Citation
Brown, JQ; Dodd, L; Geradts, J; Harmany, Z; Kennedy, S; Kim, Y; ... Willett, Rebecca (2013). Data set for "Quantitative segmentation of fluorescence microscopy images of heterogeneous
tissue: Application to the detection of residual disease in tumor margins". Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/6378.Collections
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Show full item recordScholars@Duke
David Guy Kirsch
Barbara Levine University Distinguished Professor
My clinical interests are the multi-modality care of patients with bone and soft tissue
sarcomas and developing new sarcoma therapies. My laboratory interests include utilizing
mouse models of cancer to study cancer and radiation biology in order to develop new
cancer therapies in the pre-clinical setting.
Nimmi Ramanujam
Robert W. Carr, Jr., Distinguished Professor of Biomedical Engineering
Dr. Ramanujam is the Robert W. Carr Professor of Engineering and Professor of Cancer
Pharmacology and Global Health at Duke University and co-program leader of the Radiation
Oncology and Imaging Program (ROIP) at the Duke Cancer Institute. She founded the
Center for Global Women’s Health Technologies (GWHT) in 2013 where she empowers trainees
to create impactful solutions to improve the lives of women and girls globally. This
center, since inception, has catalyzed new research activitie
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