Jerry L. Prince Explained

Jerry Ladd Prince
Nationality:American
Fields:Electrical and Computer Engineering
Workplaces:Johns Hopkins University
Alma Mater:Univ. of Connecticut (BS)
M.I.T. (PhD)
Thesis Title:Geometric model-based estimations from projections
Thesis Url:http://ssg.mit.edu/ssg_theses/ssg_theses_1974_1999/Prince_PhD_1_88.pdf
Thesis Year:1988
Doctoral Advisor:Alan S. Willsky
Doctoral Students:Christos Davatzikos
Known For:Harmonic phase
Gradient vector flow
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Website:https://iacl.ece.jhu.edu/

Jerry L. Prince is the William B. Kouwenhoven Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering at Johns Hopkins University. He has over 44,000 citations, and an h-index of 85.

Prince received a BS degree in Electrical Engineering and Computer Science from the University of Connecticut, and a doctorate in Electrical Engineering from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

His research involves 3-D medical image reconstruction, registration, segmentation, and shape and motion analysis. He is noted for developing the Harmonic phase (HARP) algorithm for extracting and processing motion information from tagged magnetic resonance image (MRI) sequences for cardiac motion. He also holds appointments in the departments of Applied Mathematics and Statistics, and Computer Science at Johns Hopkins University, as well as in the departments of Biomedical Engineering and Radiology at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. As such, he has been involved in "developing digital head models for faster, more precise diagnoses" of head injuries, such as those seen in sport.[1]

Prince received a National Science Foundation Presidential Faculty Fellowship in 1993. He was associate editor of IEEE Transactions on Image Processing, associate editor of IEEE Transactions on Medical Imaging and as of 2020 was a member of the editorial board of Medical Image Analysis.[2] In 2011, he become a Fellow[3] of the MICCAI Society.

Selected research

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Notes and References

  1. Web site: Sneiderman-Jhu . Phil . HEAD 'TWINS' COULD SAFEGUARD FOOTBALL PLAYERS . Futurity . 30 January 2018 . 30 March 2020.
  2. Web site: Whiting School of Engineering Faculty . Johns Hopkins University . 30 March 2020.
  3. Web site: MICCAI Society Fellows . The MICCAI Society. 10 October 2020.