Zachary,<br><br>I am not familar with the HDR formats and tools. When I looked at the HDR stuff a few years ago, I just re-implemented the reported algorithms :)<br><br>If you can some details on these formats, we could consider adding them to ITK. Our only high dynamic range formats are 16 bit png/tiff and then the floating point variants of meta, nrrd, analyze(?). People are introducing new microscope formats which may be 16 bits but I suspect they are not higher than that.
<br><br>Jim<br><br><div><span class="gmail_quote">On 5/2/06, <b class="gmail_sendername">Zachary Pincus</b> <<a href="mailto:zpincus@stanford.edu">zpincus@stanford.edu</a>> wrote:</span><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="border-left: 1px solid rgb(204, 204, 204); margin: 0pt 0pt 0pt 0.8ex; padding-left: 1ex;">
Hi folks,<br><br>I'm interested in using some visualization tools developed for<br>"HDR" (high dynamic range) images from the computer graphics world.<br><br>Unfortunately, the HDR image formats developed by these people, now
<br>increasingly standard for HDR imaging, are pretty unrelated to the<br>formats for medical imaging that have supported high dynamic ranges<br>for years.<br><br>My question is whether anyone knows any intermediate floating-point
<br>formats that both ITK and some HDR conversion tool or another can<br>read. Right now, I've can write unsigned shorts out from ITK as<br>tiffs and can convert them to Radiance HDR formats via ra_tiff; I<br>unfortunately can't find an analogous path for floating-point images.
<br><br>Anyone have any experience/leads/thoughts in this direction? Tools<br>for nrrd images perhaps?<br><br>Zach<br>_______________________________________________<br>Insight-users mailing list<br><a href="mailto:Insight-users@itk.org">
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