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David H. Laidlaw

Researcher at Brown University

Publications -  248
Citations -  10822

David H. Laidlaw is an academic researcher from Brown University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Visualization & Diffusion MRI. The author has an hindex of 49, co-authored 246 publications receiving 9917 citations. Previous affiliations of David H. Laidlaw include California Institute of Technology & University of Miami.

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Proceedings ArticleDOI

Assembling virtual pots from 3D measurements of their fragments

TL;DR: The overall approach to the automatic estimation of mathematical models of such pots from 3D measurements of sherds is presented, which is a representation suitable for comparisons, geometric feature extraction, visualization and digital archiving.
Journal ArticleDOI

Frontal White Matter Integrity in Borderline Personality Disorder With Self-Injurious Behavior

TL;DR: Women with borderline personality disorder-self-injurious behavior exhibit decreased white matter microstructural integrity in inferior frontal brain regions that may include components of orbito-frontal circuitry.
Patent

Method, apparatus and computer program product for the interactive rendering of multivalued volume data with layered complementary values

TL;DR: In this article, a system, method and computer program product for rendering volumetric multivalued primary data is described, which includes a rendering engine having an input coupled to a source of multi-valued primary data and an output coupled to display.
Journal ArticleDOI

Super-resolution registration using tissue-classified distance fields

TL;DR: A method for registering the position and orientation of bones across multiple computed-tomography volumes of the same subject is presented, which can operate on multiple bones within a set of volumes, and registers bones that have features commensurate in size to the voxel dimension.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Archaeological data visualization in VR: analysis of lamp finds at the great temple of petra, a case study

TL;DR: An evaluation of the ARCHAVE (ARCHAeological Virtual Environment) system, an immersive virtual reality (VR) environment for archaeological research, found that experienced archaeologists used the system to study excavation data, confirming existing hypotheses and postulating new theories they had not been able to discover without it.