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Collaborators |
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Darrel
L. Chenoweth , PhD,
is Professor Emeritus, ECE
Department, University of Louisville. Dr. Chenoweth received his PhD
from Auburn University. His expertise spans various aspects of machine
learning, pattern recognition and image analysis, where he published
several technical papers and holds a number of patents. As a researcher,
Dr. Chenoweth worked on a number of long-term defense projects during
1980's and 1990's. He introduced several subjects into the ECE
curriculum and graduated a number of MS and PhD students. His long
career with the University of Louisville involved various senior duties
including Chairman for the ECE Department (1992-2004), Associate Vice
President for Research (1998-2006), and Chairman of the State of
Kentucky DoD EPSCoR Committee for over 15 years. Among his distinct
achievements is the establishment of the CSE PhD program (1988) where he
worked as first coordinator, and the establishment of the EE PhD program
in 2000. In his capacity as Associate Vice President for Research, he
played significant role in advancing the University's agenda in research
and scholarly activities and in research ethics. During his tenure as
Chairman of the ECE department, ECE witnessed enormous expansion in
teaching, research and scholarly activities in computer vision,
biomedical imaging, computational intelligence, MEMS and Nanotechnology.
Dr. Chenoweth collaborated with the CVIP Lab since its inception in 1994
and played major role in its establishment and expansion. He had been on
various graduate students committees and Co-PI on two NSF grants. Dr.
Chenoweth is a fellow of the IEE. He has officially retired in December
2007 after 28 years of productive and rewarding service at the
University of Louisville. He holds an Emeritus Professorship position at
the University of Louisville. |

Thomas Starr, PhD,
is Professor of Chemical Engineering Department, and Associate Dean
for Research, University of Louisville. Dr. Starr's current research
interests include thin film materials for energy applications and solid
freeform fabrication (SFF) for rapid prototyping, direct manufacturing
and function-graded materials. Thin film materials research includes
atomic layer deposition (ALD) for fuel cell materials, advanced
batteries and photoelectrochemical energy systems; and chemical vapor
deposition (CVD) for thermal barrier coatings and solid oxide fuel cell
(SOFC) components. SFF research focuses on direct metal deposition (DMD)
for custom fabrication of titanium components for biomedical and
aerospace applications, for combinatorial screening of ternary alloy
compositions and for development of composition-graded metal
structures. Previous research in chemical vapor infiltration (CVI)
advanced process understanding and control for manufacture of ceramic
and carbon matrix composites for energy and aerospace applications. |
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Allan
Farman, PhD,
is is Professor of Radiology and Imaging
Science, Department of Surgical and Hospital Dentistry, The University
of Louisville. He is a Diplomate of the American Board of Oral and
Maxillofacial Radiology and a licensed specialist in that discipline. He
conducts private practice of maxillofacial radiology and has been
involved with digital dental imaging since its inception almost two
decades ago. In his private practice he interacts with all disciplines
within dentistry and is familiar with the needs of practitioners. Dr.
Farman is also Honored Guest Professor of Peking University, China. He
is the voting Representative for the American Dental Association to the
International DICOM (Digital Imaging and Communications in Medicine)
Standards Committee. He also founded and Chairs the International
Congress and Exposition on Computed Maxillofacial Imaging and is
Scientific Editor for the American Academy of Oral and Maxillofacial
Radiology. He is widely published and lectures both nationally and
internationally. |
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Dr.
Amir A. Amini
is Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering Department.
His research interests are focused on
medical imaging and biomedical image processing and analysis. Areas of
general interest include physiologic imaging and image analysis. Areas
of particular interest include development of new techniques for
quantification of the heart motion from cardiac MRI and its application to determination of mechanical strain. In the area
of vascular imaging his interests are in developing techniques to
determine intravascular pressures, shear stress, and other mechanical
indices of function from phase-contrast MR images. He also has an
interest in automated morphometrics for determination of anatomical
volumes, and shapes. |
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Dr.
Aruni Bhatnagar
is Professor of Medicine, and
University Scholar in the University of Louisville. The major
focus of his research is to elucidate the mechanisms by which oxidative
stress affects cardiovascular function. In particular, he is interested
in the role of lipid peroxidation as a contributor to myocardial
ischemic injury and atherosclerosis. Although lipid peroxidation
generates several reactive intermediates and end products, lipid-derived
unsaturated aldehydes are believed to be a major source of oxidative
stress and these toxicants appear to be critical mediators of tissue
injury due to lipid peroxidation. In order to understand how the
cardiovascular tissues protect themselves from the toxic products of
lipid peroxidation, he is currently investigating the biochemical
mechanisms by which unsatuarated aldehydes are detoxified in the heart
and blood vessels. The enzymes - aldose reductase, glutathione S-transferases
and aldehyde dehydrogenase are the major constituents of aldehyde
metabolism in the heart, and vascular smooth muscle and endothelial
cells, and that these enzymes function in tandem to protect
cardiovascular tissues from the harmful effects of lipid peroxidation.
Based on this understanding he is currently assessing in detail the role
of aldose reductase and related aldo-keto reductases in the
detoxification of lipid peroxidation products. He is investigating
whether inhibition or upregulation of these enzymes affects the ability
of the heart to withstand oxidative stress during ischemia and
reperfusion. In a parallel series of experiments he is studying the
role of aldose reductase in atherogenesis in an effort to ascertain
whether changes in aldehyde metabolism alter plaque burden in
atherosclerotic animals. He believes that this line of inquiry will
lead to a better understanding of the mechanisms by which oxidative
stress mediates or exacerbates cardiovascular disease, and how the
untoward cardiovascular effects of lipid peroxidation could be
prevented. |
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Dr.
Jacek Zurada
is Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering Department, and
Distinguished University Scholar in University of Louisville.
He received his MS and PhD
degrees (with distinction) in electrical engineering from the
Technical
University of Gdansk, Poland in 1968 and 1975, respectively.
Since 1989 he has been a Professor, and since 1993 a distinguished
Samuel T. Fife
Professor with the
Electrical and
Computer Engineering Department at the
University of
Louisville, Kentucky. He was Department Chair from 2004 to
2006. He has published 280
journal
and
conference
papers in the areas of neural networks, computational intelligence, data
mining, image processing and VLSI circuits. |
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Dr. Manuel Casanova
is Associate Chair for Research
in the Department of Psychiatry,
and Gottfried and Gisela Kolb Endowed Chair in
Psychiatry. He
made his residency training in neurology and then spent 3 years doing a
fellowship in neuropathology at The Johns Hopkins Hospital. During his
stay at the Johns Hopkins
Hospital, Dr. Casanova was in-charge of Pediatric Neuropathology, a fact
which kindled his interest in developmental disorders of the brain. His
clinical experience was enhanced by appointments as either a consultant
or staff neuropathologist at Sinai Hospital (Maryland), the North
Charles Hospital and the D.C. General Hospital. He spent several years
as Deputy Medical Examiner for
Washington, D.C., where
he gained valuable experience in the post-mortem examination of Sudden
Infant Death Syndrome and child abuse. His expertise in the field was
recognized by honorary appointments as a Scientific Expert for the Armed
Forces Institute of Pathology and as a Professorial Lecturer for the
Department of Forensic Science at George Washington University. Dr.
Casanova spent 8 years helping to establish 2 of the most successful
brain banks in this country: The Johns Hopkins Brain Resource Center (3
years) and the Brain Bank Unit of the Clinical Brains Disorders Branch
at the National Institutes of Mental Health (5 years). At present, Dr.
Casanova is well published in a multitude of postmortem techniques
including neuronal morphometry immunocytochemistry, neurochemistry, and
autoradiography. |
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Dr. Zijiang J. He
is Professor of Psychology Department. His research interest is in
understanding what and how animals and humans perceive the visual world.
Because the act of seeing is complex, understanding its underlying
processes demands a multidisciplinary approach that deals with a variety
of problems associated with visual perception and cognition. To this
end, his laboratory employs several research techniques including
psychophysical methods, phenomenological observations, recording of
motor actions (eye movement and locomotion), and the virtual reality
technology. Collaborations with scientists using other techniques
(single cell recording, imaging, computational, modeling, etc.) are
welcomed. Students in his laboratory receive a broad and comprehensive
training in perception and cognition. |
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Dr. Ed Essock
is Professor of Psychology Department. His general research
interest is the low-level organization of the visual system, including
the relation of basic visual abilities to the properties of the visual
neurons. This research has a natural extension to clinical vision
science where the basic research can be applied by analyzing these same
visual abilities in patients with known neural disruptions. |
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