Episodes
In this special episode for Halloween 2023, Dr. Melanie Bauer tells us her journey in developing postmortem MRI techniques.
Published 10/21/23
Published 10/21/23
In this episode, Dr. Moss Zhao speaks with Dr. Georg Alexander Schramm about academic publishing and open access.
Published 05/05/23
In this episode, Dr. Moss Zhao speaks with Dr. Hector Ramos about science podcasts in South America
Published 11/23/22
Magnetic Resonance Fingerprinting (MRF) is a quantitative MRI framework developed in 2013, with its paradigm-changing methodology first described in a milestone Nature paper, cited by thousands of works since then.  In this episode, Constantin Slioussarenko had the chance to be joined by Dan Ma, who was at the origin of MRF, and Chaitra Badve, neuroradiologist who has led clinical translation of MRF for numerous clinical applications, to discuss the main advantages of MRF in the context of...
Published 06/22/22
"Autism is part of neurodiversity; it is neither a disorder, nor a disease" This is vital as autistic people might have an MRI scan for common clinical concerns, like headaches or low back pains, or for monitoring of epilepsy, often a comorbidity of autism, but also may participate in MRI studies. Making the scans autism friendly means addressing the preferences and needs of autistic people by using reasonable adjustments. Communication before, during and after scan is essential,...
Published 04/17/22
"Reproducibility and Federated Learning" Deep learning methods are becoming increasingly popular in medical image analysis. Their performance, however, heavily depends on availability, diversity, and quality of the data. In this episode, Sanam Assili and Egor Panfilov discuss with Francesco Santini current issues in medical image segmentation, federated learning as a promising solution, and recently introduced open source Dafne framework. Dafne is a joint effort by the University of Basel,...
Published 11/27/21
"Silence Is Golden"  MRI doesn’t have to be noisy. The Zero Echo Time sequence is naturally quiet, but is yet to breakthrough into mainstream use.  This episode is a conversation between Sanam Assili from ESMRMB and Tobias Wood from King’s College London. He discusses his work on making Silent MRI useful for clinicians, in collaboration with GE Healthcare. A video illustrating how quiet the sequence is can be found here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tSxBokkF2s0 And a recent review...
Published 05/26/21
In this special episode for ISMRM 2021, we spoke with members of Open Source Initiative for Perfusion Imaging (OSIPI) of the ISMRM Perfusion Study group. You may find more information about OSIPI here: https://www.osipi.org/
Published 05/11/21
Dr. Yuriko Suzuki shared her successful story of applying for the Research Fellowship of The Royal Academy of Engineering. Dr. Suzuki's research focuses on the development of novel non-invasive dynamic MR Angiography (MRA) techniques using Arterial Spin Labelling (ASL) MRI. She is a member of Nuffield Department of Clinical Neurosciences, University of Oxford. She is interviewed by Dr. Moss Zhao, a member of ESMRMB Early Career Researcher's Committee.
Published 11/14/20
Maxim Zaitsev talks about the current state and the future of pulse-sequence programming, especially how open-source and vendor-independent solutions can change the way we experience MRI research today. He is interviewed by Daniel Hoinkiss, a member of ESMRMB Early Career Researcher's Committee.
Published 11/01/20
Andrew Webb talks about his plenary talk on sustainability in MRI at the virtual conference of ESMRMB 2020 on 30th September, Wednesday. He interviewed with Ozlem Ipek, a member and chair of ESMRMB Early Career Researcher's Committee about his activities with CAMERA, Committee for Advancement of MRI Education and Research in Africa.
Published 09/29/20