scispace - formally typeset
S

S. Scheib

Researcher at Varian Medical Systems

Publications -  20
Citations -  274

S. Scheib is an academic researcher from Varian Medical Systems. The author has contributed to research in topics: Dosimetry & Imaging phantom. The author has an hindex of 8, co-authored 20 publications receiving 221 citations.

Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Time dependent pre-treatment EPID dosimetry for standard and FFF VMAT

TL;DR: This work shows EPID-based pre-treatment dose verification can be performed on a CP basis for VMAT plans and can measure pre- treatment doses for both flattened and unflattened beams in a time dependent manner which highlights deviations that are missed in integrated field verifications.
Journal ArticleDOI

Optimized Varian aSi portal dosimetry: development of datasets for collective use.

TL;DR: The dosimetric behavior of all tested aSi panels was found to be nearly identical for all tested energies, and the possibility of converting optimized configurations into ready‐to‐use standardized datasets was investigated.
Journal ArticleDOI

Evaluation of a new six degrees of freedom couch for radiation therapy.

TL;DR: The new 6DoF couch is able to apply requested shifts with high accuracy and has the potential to be used for treatment techniques with the highest demands in patient setup accuracy such as those needed in stereotactic treatments.
Journal ArticleDOI

Tracking latency in image-based dynamic MLC tracking with direct image access.

TL;DR: This study integrates direct image access with a DMLC tracking system and quantifies the tracking latency of the integrated system for both kV and MV image-based tracking, which resulted in substantial tracking latency reductions compared with image- based tracking without direct imageAccess.
Journal ArticleDOI

Patient positioning in radiotherapy based on surface imaging using time of flight cameras.

TL;DR: The proposed stereo-ToF system allows for sufficient accuracy and faster patient repositioning in radiotherapy and could allow, in the future, not only for an accurate positioning but also a real time tracking of any patient intrafraction motion (translation, involuntary, and breathing).