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Ben Glocker

Researcher at Imperial College London

Publications -  363
Citations -  30047

Ben Glocker is an academic researcher from Imperial College London. The author has contributed to research in topics: Computer science & Segmentation. The author has an hindex of 60, co-authored 300 publications receiving 20402 citations. Previous affiliations of Ben Glocker include Analysis Group & Microsoft.

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The Multimodal Brain Tumor Image Segmentation Benchmark (BRATS)

Bjoern H. Menze, +67 more
TL;DR: The Multimodal Brain Tumor Image Segmentation Benchmark (BRATS) as mentioned in this paper was organized in conjunction with the MICCAI 2012 and 2013 conferences, and twenty state-of-the-art tumor segmentation algorithms were applied to a set of 65 multi-contrast MR scans of low and high grade glioma patients.
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Efficient Multi-Scale 3D CNN with Fully Connected CRF for Accurate Brain Lesion Segmentation

TL;DR: An efficient and effective dense training scheme which joins the processing of adjacent image patches into one pass through the network while automatically adapting to the inherent class imbalance present in the data, and improves on the state-of-the‐art for all three applications.
Posted Content

Attention U-Net: Learning Where to Look for the Pancreas

TL;DR: A novel attention gate (AG) model for medical imaging that automatically learns to focus on target structures of varying shapes and sizes is proposed to eliminate the necessity of using explicit external tissue/organ localisation modules of cascaded convolutional neural networks (CNNs).
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Traumatic brain injury: integrated approaches to improve prevention, clinical care, and research

Andrew I R Maas, +342 more
- 01 Dec 2017 - 
TL;DR: The InTBIR Participants and Investigators have provided informed consent for the study to take place in Poland.
Posted ContentDOI

Identifying the Best Machine Learning Algorithms for Brain Tumor Segmentation, Progression Assessment, and Overall Survival Prediction in the BRATS Challenge

Spyridon Bakas, +438 more
TL;DR: This study assesses the state-of-the-art machine learning methods used for brain tumor image analysis in mpMRI scans, during the last seven instances of the International Brain Tumor Segmentation (BraTS) challenge, i.e., 2012-2018, and investigates the challenge of identifying the best ML algorithms for each of these tasks.