Imaging in 2020 IV
September 25-29, 2005
Program Chair: Chris Contag
Organizers: Thomas Meade, Daniel Sullivan, and James Tatum
SUNDAY
Proteomic mapping and imaging of the endothelial cell surface and its caveole in vivo
Jan Schnitzer, Sidney Kimmel Cancer Center
Inverse bioelectric functional imaging: modeling, simulation, and visualization
Chris Johnson, University of Utah
TUESDAY
Session Chair: William Kaelin Jr, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute
Advances in MRI for clinical imaging
Greg Sorensen, Massachusetts General Hospital
Optical imaging of breast cancer: Tumor detection, co-registration with MRI, and monitoring neoadjuvant chemotherapy
Bruce Tromberg, UC Irvine
What prevents effective translation of imaging tools to the clinic?
Andreas Jacobs, University of Cologne
Challenges for MR contrast
Xaver Bhujwalla, Johns Hopkins University
Keynote Address
Visualizing the future
Alexander Tsiaras, Anatomical Travelogue
THURSDAY
Session Chair: Steve Conolly, UC Berkeley
Imaging the reversal of tumorigenesis upon oncogene inactivation
Dean Felsher, Stanford University
Visualizing immune reactions with bioluminescence
Robert Negrin, Stanford University
Bioluminescent imaging of degradable Luciferase fusion proteins
William Kaelin Jr, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute
MONDAY
Session Chair: Tom Meade, Northwestern University
Insights into cell compartmentalization and protein trafficking using GFP technology
Jennifer Lippincott-Schwartz, NIH
Macromolecular delivery by cationic protein transduction domains
Steve Dowdy, UC San Diego
Visualizing protease activity
Bonnie Sloane, Wayne State University
SAAC utility in high thru-put screening for the selection of new radiodiagnostics and therapeutics
John Barrett, Molecular Insight Pharmaceuticals
Session Chair: Simon Cherry, UC Davis
Visualizing the dynamics of an immune response
Ulrich von Andrian, Harvard University
In vivo cell tracking and flow cytometry
Charles Lin, Massachusetts General Hospital
WEDNESDAY
Session Chair: Eva Sevick-Muraca, Baylor College of Medicine
Advancing reagents for neuroimaging
Joanna Fowler, Brookhaven National Lab
Fluorescent chemistries: Next generation of optical reagents
Ching-Hsuan Tung, Massachusetts General Hospital
Monochromatic X-ray imaging using the k-edge: Fusing diagnosis and therapy
Frank Carroll, Vanderbilt University
Molecular sensing with MR
Thomas Meade, Northwestern University
NIH Roadmap Roundtable: Where is the imaging field going, and how do we get there?
Discussion Chair: Dave Piston, Vanderbilt University
Panel Members: John Barrett, Simon Cherry, Steve Conolly
Session Chair: Bruce Tromberg, UC Irvine
Taking new optical imaging technologies to the clinic
Eva Sevick-Muraca, Baylor College of Medicine
Next generation in vivo fluorescent imaging: One- and two-photon fluorescence microendoscopy
Mark Schnitzer, Stanford University