Cinematic rendering
In medical diagnostics, cinematic rendering is an image processing technique applied to create three-dimensional, photorealistic images of cross-sectional data, such as computed-tomography, or magnetic resonance imaging / Cinematic rendering is an alternative to the volume rendering, the name was inspired by the modern computer animation techniques that allow studios, like Pixar, to create realistically looking objects.
The steps used to produce the cinematic rendering are similar to the ones for the volume rendering:
- the magnitude value of each voxel produced during the scan is mapped into the color and opacity pair based on what structures need to be highlighted or hidden;
- ray casting used for volume rendering, where each pixel in the 2D image is formed by a single ray of light, is replaced by path tracing with a global illumination model that integrates over all the illuminance arriving to every single point on the surface of an object.
Applications in medical education
Cinematic rendering is not approved for the clinical use.Cinematic rendering technology is currently applied as a virtual educational method at specialized facilities, institutions, and centers to teach the subject of anatomy to both medical students and other healthcare professions, for example, at the JKU Faculty of Medicine at the Johannes Kepler University Linz, and for post-graduate programs in clinical areas as well as medical assistant professions.