MEDICAL IMAGING MEETS NeurIPS

December 14th, 2019 - Vancouver Convention Center, Canada

Invited Speakers

is the Herschel Seder Professor of Biomedical Engineering and the Inaugural Director of the Mathematical Institute for Data Science at The Johns Hopkins University. He is co-author of the book Generalized Principal Component Analysis (GPCA), and of more than 300 papers in machine learning, computer vision, controls, robotics and biomedical data science. He has received several best paper awards for his work as well as the JK Aggarwal Prize and the ONR Young Investigator Award. He is an AIMBE Fellow, IAPR Fellow, IEEE Fellow, and Sloan Fellow.

is Professor of Computational Imaging at the School of Biomedical Engineering and Imaging Sciences, King’s College London, UK, where she is Director of the EPSRC Centre for Doctoral Training in Smart Medical Imaging. Her research interests are in machine/deep learning, nonlinear motion modelling, multi-modality and quantitative imaging, for applications in cancer, cardiovascular disease, and fetal health. Julia is a Fellow of the Medical Image Computing and Computer Assisted Intervention (MICCAI) society and of the European Laboratory for Learning

is CEO of Paige and has over 15 years of experience creating advanced medical imaging and AI-based software. He worked at HeartFlow and Siemens Corporate Research. Dr. Grady is a Fellow of the American Institute of Medical and Biomedical Engineers who has published two books, over 100 peer-reviewed journal and conference papers and has over 300 issued or pending patents worldwide.

is Vice-Chair for Research in the Department of Radiology at NYU Langone Health, Professor of Radiology and Physiology & Neuroscience at NYU Grossman School of Medicine, and Professor of Biomedical Engineering at NYU Tandon School of Engineering. His research aims at seeing what has previously been invisible, in order to improve human health. He is credited with founding the field of parallel imaging, in which distributed arrays of detectors are used to gather magnetic resonance images at previously inaccessible speeds. Parallel imaging hardware and software is now an integral part of MRI machines, and is used routinely in MRI scans worldwide. In 2006, Dr. Sodickson was awarded the Gold Medal of the International Society for Magnetic Resonance in Medicine (ISMRM), and he recently completed a term as ISMRM president. He is in the process of launching a new institute – Tech4Health – designed to bring emerging technologies such as continuous sensing and artificial intelligence to biomedicine. www.cai2r.net