How to get the intensity values (data stored) that is stored in the voxels (3D image) at the certain distances from the origin of the sphere?
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Hello, I have a 3D medical image with data values stored in its each voxel. I would like to pull out the data values of image at certain radial distances. The origin of my image is (0, 0, 0) and radius of the sphere is 20 mm. I would like to generate 19 concentric shells of equal thickness 1 mm (so total is 20 mm) in between center of sphere and its surface. At each concentric shell, I am interested to extract the value of the data stored in 3D image. How to write simple Matlab code for this situation? Has anyone done this before? Please provide me some ideas and suggestions, may be a little piece of code as well.
3 Comments
Walter Roberson
on 1 Sep 2018
It looks like the ElementSpacing has the relevant information about pixel sizes.
Accepted Answer
Walter Roberson
on 1 Sep 2018
filename = ...;
info = mha_readheader(filename);
V = mha_read_volume(info);
spx = info.ElementSpacing(1);
spy = info.ElementSpacing(2);
spz = info.ElementSpacing(3);
%careful, first dimension is y not x.
sx = size(V,2);
sy = size(V,1);
sz = size(V,3);
cx = sx/2; cy = sy/2; cz = sz/2;
xv = ((1:sx) - cx) * spx;
yv = ((1:sy) - cy) * spy;
zv = ((1:sz) - cz) * spz;
[X, Y, Z] = ndgrid(xv, yv, zv);
D = sqrt(X.^2 + Y.^2 + Z.^2);
rvals = 0 : 19;
rthick = 1;
Nr = length(rvals);
shells = cell(Nr, 2);
for ridx = 1 : Nr
r = rvals(ridx);
mask = (D >= r & D < r+thick);
shells{ridx, 2} = mask;
shells{ridx, 1} = V(mask);
end
Now the first column of the cell array shells contain the extracted data values, and the second column contains the mask of locations that were extracted (in case you need it later.)
6 Comments
Walter Roberson
on 2 Sep 2018
No, avgpixelvals is the mean for each concentric shell. shells is a cell array in which the first column contains only values that lie within the particular concentric sphere for that one radius.
More Answers (1)
blues
on 3 Sep 2018
1 Comment
Walter Roberson
on 3 Sep 2018
Your graph appears to show a y value peaking about 8.4*10^-8
Anyhow, you used the wrong numeric syntax
axis([0 120 5E-11 8E-8])
or
axis([0 120 5*10.^(-11) 8*10.^(-8)]);
With 5E-11 being only about 1/1600 of 8E-8, you should expect that MATLAB will probably round the lower bound to 0. After all, you would need your y resolution to be at least 1600 for it to make a 1 pixel difference.
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