Release Name: 3.0.0
Notes:
======================================
InsightSNAP Release Notes
Version 3.0.0
======================================
-----------------
1. New Features
-----------------
1.1. New in Version 3.0.0
----------------------------------------------
This is a major new release of ITK-SNAP. The user interface has
been completely
rewritten using the Qt platform, and new functionality for
multi-modal image
segmentation has been added.
1.1.1. New functionality for multi-modality image segmentation
- SNAP is no longer limited to just scalar-valued and RGB-valued
images. An
image with any number of components can be loaded into SNAP. The
GUI provides
widgets for selecting the currently shown component, deriving
scalar images
from the components (magnitude, maximum, average), and for
three-component
images, rendering them as color RGB images. It is also possible to
animate
components, e.g., for time-varying image data. Multi-component
images enjoy
access to the same features as scalar images, such as curve-based
contrast
adjustment, colormaps, etc.
- When multiple layers are loaded into SNAP, the user has a new
option to
tile the layers in each of the 2D slice views. This greatly
simplifies
working with multiple overlays. This also carries over to the
automatic
segmentation mode, where the speed image can now be displayed side
by side
with the anatomical images. It can also aid manual segmentation of
multi-modality data. During manual segmentation, polygon outlines
are traced
on top of each of the tiled views.
- Automatic segmentation (using active contours) can now be
performed in
multi-modality images. Multiple image layers, each of which may
have
multiple components (e.g., RGB, complex or tensor data), can be
passed to
the auto-segmentation mode. Once there, the user can use the new
clustering
preprocessing mode to derive a speed image from this multi-variate
input.
The current implementation of clustering uses Gaussian Mixture
Modeling.
The user selects the desired number of clusters (i.e., tissue
classes) and
once the clusters are initialized, chooses the cluster of interest.
1.1.2. New features in the Qt-based GUI
- The graphical user interface (GUI) uses Qt, a much more powerful
toolkit
than the FLTK toolkit in the previous versions. The new GUI is much
richer
with multiple access paths to common functions (such as choosing
the active
label or changing the color map for an overlay). There are fewer
'apply'
buttons to press, as most of the time, the program reacts
immediately to
user input into the widgets. More features are available in the
left-side
panel, and these features are organized more logically than before.
- New functionality for saving and opening workspaces. A workspace
represents
the state of ITK-SNAP at a given moment, including all the images
currently
loaded in an ITK-SNAP window, as well as associated settings and
parameters.
Workspaces are saved in the XML format. They can be packaged
together with
the images to which they refer and shared with other users.
- The layer inspector dialog is greatly improved, with new features
for
reordering layers, quickly changing their visibility, applying a
colormap,
adjusting contrast, saving, etc. The speed image and level set
image,
created by the program during automatic segmentation, are now
accessible
in the layer inspector, so the user can change their color maps as
well.
In the future, the layer inspector will provide access to much more
functionality, such as applying image processing operations
(smoothing,
feature extraction, bias field correction) to individual layers.
- The various plots in the GUI now use the vtkChart library in VTK.
This
provides richer visualization capabilities than the old version in
which
all the plots were rendered using custom OpenGL code. This is
particularly
noticable in the contrast adjustment page of the layer inspector
and in
the preprocessing dialog in auto-segmentation mode.
- The window shown at startup shows a graphical list of recently
opened images
and workspaces. This makes it easier to quickly load an image, and
keeps the
GUI clean during startup.
- SNAP recognizes pinch gestures (tested on the Mac) for zoom. This
should
make interaction easier for trackpad users.
- Layers can be assigned nicknames, such as "T1".
- Unicode support. Filenames and user-entered data can now be in
any language.
- The label editor has new features, such as resetting all labels
do defaults,
filtering labels by name, assinging foreground/background labels
directly
from the dialog.
1.1.3. Improvements to 3D rendering window
- The 3D rendering window now uses the VTK toolkit for rendering.
This will
make it easier to introduce new functionality (such as volume
rendering)
in future versions.
- The 3D rendering pipeline is much smarter than before. It detects
changes
to individual labels in the segmentation, so each paint operation
no longer
requires the entire set of 3D meshes to be recomputed. Rendering is
significantly faster than before.
- There is a new option to automatically render meshes in a
background thread.
When enabled, the mesh updates itself in response to polygon and
paintbrush
operations. This works well even for large and complex
segmentations. However,
this is still an experimental feature and may lead to occasional
weird crashes
due to multi-threading issues.
- The scalpel tool uses VTK's 3D cutplane widget that can be
rotated and moved
after the cut has been drawn.
1.1.4. Other new features
- Reduced memory footprint for large images. The previous version
of SNAP
would allocate on the order of 6 bytes for every voxel in the main
image.
Two bytes were used to store the grayscale image intensity, two for
the
segmentation, and two for the segmentation undo buffer. The undo
buffer is
now stored in a compressed format, reducing the required memory by
almost
one third. In the future, we also plan to compress the segmentation
itself,
which will cut the memory use by another 2 bytes per voxel.
- Improved support for reading/parsing DICOM data. When the user
opens a file
in a directory containing DICOM images, SNAP parses this directory
much faster than in previous versions (especially when data is on
CDs) and
lists all the series with their dimensions and other meta-data,
making it
easier to determine which series one wishes to load.
1.1.5. Programmatic improvements
- The SNAP code has been extensively refactored. There is a new
"model" layer
separating the Qt GUI from the "logic" layer. This layer is
agnostic to the
type of GUI toolkit used, and implements generic GUI logic. This
design
minimizes the amount of Qt code, so that swapping Qt versions or
even
porting to a different toolkit will be easier in the future. Unlike
the old
FLTK code, which had huge numbers callbacks, the new code relies on
a
widget-model coupling mechanism. This makes the code more robust
and
reduces the amount of Qt-aware code.
1.2. New in Version 2.4.0
----------------------------------------------
This is the last planned release of the FLTK-based version of
ITK-SNAP. It adds
minimal new functionality and addressed a number of bugs reported
in the last
year. The subsequent releases of ITK-SNAP will be based on the Qt
platform and
will have the 3.x version number.
1.2.1. New Features and UI Improvements
- Ported the dependency on ITK 3.20.1 to ITK 4.2 on all operating
systems:
Mac OS X, Linux, and Windows.
- ITK-SNAP can read and write MRC images now.
1.2.2. Bug Fixes and Stability Improvements
- Fixed a problem with the RAI code which was not updating after
reorienting.
- Fixed bug ID: 3371200: The saving of the preprocessed image was
failing.
- Fixed bug ID: 3309784 and 3415653: Windows file browser broken
and enable
all document setting not available in version 2.2.0.
- Fixed bug ID: 3415681 It was not possible to update the mesh when
working
with volumes of one slice. An exception is thrown and catch with
fl_alert.
- Fixed bug ID: 3323300 BYU mesh saving was save-able, while the
internal
data was not prepared for this saving. The user interface is
correctly
updated now. In addition, the BYU writer save geometric data as
well.
- Fixed: bug ID: 3023489: When running from command line with -o
flag,
there was no check to see if images are same size. Two asserts were
changed in exception throwing.
- Fixes for building with different releases of fltk 1.3.
- Corrected a bug in the code with SparseLevelSet filter being used
instead of ParallelSparse.
======================================
1.3. New in Version 2.2.0
----------------------------------------------
This is largely a maintenance release, with a few usability
enhancements based
on user feedback. The main change programmatically is 64 bit
support on Linux,
MacOS and Windows.
1.3.1. New Features and UI Improvements
- 64 bit versions of the software are available for Linux, Windows
and Mac.
These versions are now built nightly and will be distributed on
SourceForge.net. For this to work, we had to change to newer
versions of
the supporting libraries: ITK 3.20, VTK 5.6.1, and FLTK 1.3.0.rc3.
The
latter was necessary for 64 bit MacOS, which many users have
requested.
Thanks to Michael Hanke for providing a patch for ITK 3.18
compatibility.
- The maximum number of labels has been increased to 65535 to
support
interoperability with tools like FreeSurfer, which generate
segmentations
with large numbers of labels.
- A new window for displaying volumes and statistics. Previously,
users had
to export volumes to a text file in order to view them. Now they
can be
viewed dynamically. This was possible by moving to FLTK 1.3, which
includes the Fl_Table widget.
- A new tab on the layer inspector displaying image metadata,
particularly
useful for DICOM files.
- Several changes to the polygon drawing interface. The buttons at
the
bottom of the slice window are now shown dynamically, based on what
the
user is doing. Right clicking brings up a popup menu, allowing to
bypass
the edit mode if desired. An 'undo point' operation is provided.
- Users can change the appearance of the polygon drawing UI
elements. This
addresses the request to get rid of the dotted line closing the
polygon.
- Intensity window and level in the image contrast dialog are no
longer
clamped by the minimum and maximum intensity in the image. This is
useful
for displaying statistical maps, where a certain fixed output range
is
desired.
- Finally implemented all the options under Segmentation->Export
as Mesh.
You can now export meshes for all labels either as separate mesh
files or
as a single scene. The latter is recommended with the VTK mesh
format,
where the label ids of the meshes are preserved.
- Collapsable slice windows. The new 'collapse' button gets rid of
the UI
and just shows the selected slice. This is useful when you have
multiple
SNAP sessions open at once. SNAP can be opened in this mode using
the new
command-line option '--compact ', where is 'a' for axial, 's'
for sagittal or 'c' for coronal. You can restore default SNAP
layout using
Ctrl-F3 (Command-F3 on the Mac) or using the toolbar button that
pops up.
- Also added command line options --zoom and --help
- The 'reset view' button under the slice windows has been renamed
'zoom to
fit' and it behaves more sensibly when zoom is linked across the
slice
views.
- Improved integration with MacOS and Windows operating systems. On
both
MacOS and Windows, you can drag and drop a file into an open SNAP
window
and you will be prompted to open that file as a grey image, as a
segmentation, as an overlay, or as a grey image in another SNAP
session.
Additionally, on the Mac, you can drag and drop files to the SNAP
icon on
the Dock, even if an SNAP session is not running.
- Added an option under File menu to open a new SNAP session.
- Ability to save segmentation mesh in active contour mode
1.3.2. Bug Fixes and Stability Improvements
- Fixed a problem with certain operations being very slow because
of the way
the progress bars were displayed. Preprocessing, mesh rendering and
mesh
IO will now be much faster
- Fixed problems with the snake parameter dialog. The images are
now
properly displayed and animation works.
- Fixed problems with automatic panning in crosshairs mode. Also
added a
button to enable this feature; it is disabled by default.
- Changed defaults for edge-based snakes to have non-zero weight
- Fixed display issues on newer MacBook Pro
- Fixed problem with bubbles not being spherical for certain image
orientations
1.4. New in Version 2.0
----------------------------------------------
1.4.1. New Features and UI Improvements
- Support for multiple image layers. Users can now load gray and
RGB images
as overlays on top of the main image layer. For example, one can
display a
statistical map as an overlay over an anatomical image. As of
version
1.9.8, overlays must have the same dimensions as the main image.
- A new layer inspector window. Each layer in SNAP (main image and
each of the
overlays) can be examined using the layer inspector. Currently
there are three
tabs: one for setting the intensity mapping of the layer (i.e.,
mapping from
image intensity to display intensity); one for selecting and
editing the color
map and transparency of the layer; and one providing information
about the layer.
The layer inspector replaces the old "Image Information" and
"Intensity Curve"
windows. The color bar editor is only partially functional as of
1.9.9.
- Hiding the UI. Using the 'F3' key, users can toggle certain user
interface elements
on and off. Press 'F3' once, and the left sidebar and the menu bar
disappear.
Press 'F3' twice, and all the UI elements disappear, so you are
looking just at the
image. Press 'F3' again, and the UI is restored to the original
state. This
feature works well with the '+' buttons on the slice windows. It's
intended for
multi-session SNAP users, so that the screen real estate can be
used more efficiently
by multiple SNAP sessions.
- Because now the most common SNAP commands have a shortcut, you
will be able to
do a lot with the UI hidden. Select 'Help->Keyboard Shortcuts'
to see a listing.
- Fullscreen mode. Press 'F4' to toggle fullscreen SNAP. Use it
with 'F3' to let the
image occupy the whole screen.
- An expanded menu bar. We have split the menu into File,
Segmentation and Overlay
menus to provide easier and faster access to the ITK-SNAP features.
- Native file chooser. On Windows and MacOS, ITK-SNAP will use a
native file
chooser instead of the FLTK built-in file chooser. On Mac OSX, the
native
file chooser can be further enhanced by installing the DTI-TK Quick
Look
plugin that supports NIfTI/Analyze image preview
(www.nitrc.org/projects/dtitk)
- When launched from command line, SNAP can automatically determine
whether an
image is a 3-component RGB image or a grayscale image. To use this
functionality,
users must run SNAP without "-g" or "-rgb" options:
itksnap image.nii
This feature is ideal for users who want to associate ITK-SNAP with
certain 3D image
types in their operating system (in Finder or Windows Explorer).
- Automatic check for software update. Users can enable automatic
update checking.
- External web browser support. Help and other HTML pages are now
displayed in the
operating system's own web browser, from itksnap.org. This may
displease users
connected to the internet, but this makes managing documentation a
lot easier and
hopefully will allow us to keep the documentation up to date with
the features.
- Crash recovery. When an out-of-memory or other crash occurs,
ITK-SNAP will ask you
if you want to save the segmentation image before exiting. Of
course this may not
always work, but it should make a lot of frustrated users a little
less frustrated.
- Reduced the memory footprint. There is still room for
improvement, of course. Currently,
ITK-SNAP requires 6 bytes per voxel in manual segmentation mode.
More memory is needed for
mesh rendering, and a lot more for automatic segmentation. When
loading images in 32-bit
or 64-bit formats, more memory may be required at the time of image
IO. That is because
ITK NIFTI reader (and maybe other readers) keeps a second copy of
the image in memory
during IO. This memory is immediately deallocated though.
- Unified navigation modes. The crosshair mode allows zoom and pan
(RMB/MMB), and has an
auto-pan feature when you move the crosshair close to the edge of
the slice window.
The zoom/pan mode is redundant, but we left it in place for
backward compatibility.
In the zoom/pan mode, zoom is RMB, pan is LMB, crosshair motion is
MMB. In all other
modes, crosshair motion is accessible through MMB as well.
1.4.2. Bug Fixes
- Fixed an issue with SNAP reading certain types of image twice
from disc. This should
speed up the reading of floating point images, for example.
- Color map cache is now computed on the fly. This makes
interaction with the intensity
curve and color map more real-time.
- Found a problem where in Release mode, the active contour would
do
nothing. Did not know how to fix it correctly, so replaced the
parallel
sparse field solver with the non-parallel one. This may slow down
automatic segmentation on some machines, so this is an outstanding
issue.
- Found a bug that caused images with unusual coordinate
orientations to be incorrectly
displayed (wrong coordinate labels assigned). This was caused by
incorrect mapping of
ITK direction matrix to "RAI" codes in SNAP. This affects display
of NIFTI, DICOM and
other image files. It also affects the behavior of the Reorient
Image dialog.
- Please see the bug tracker on itksnap.org for the full listing of
bug fixes.
1.4.3. Website Changes
- The itksnap.org website has been Wikified. Content can now be
edited on the fly.
1.5. New in Version 1.8
----------------------------------------------
1.5.1. New Features and UI Improvements
- Support for reading floating point images of arbitrary range.
SNAP still
represents gray images internally as signed short, but now it can
load a
floating point image and remap its intensity range to signed
shorts. When
displaying intensity values, it will map back to float.
- A new 'Adaptive' paintbrush. Under the paintbrush tool, it can be
selected
using the 'Shape' drop down. This tool can speed up manual
segmentation
quite a bit for some users. This brush has the shape of a rectagle.
As you
click on a pixel in one of the slice views, the brush will fill a
region
that includes the pixel you clicked and has more or less uniform
intensity.
For example, in brain MRI, if you click in the ventricles near the
caudate,
the brush will fill the ventricle but not the caudate. This is not
as
powerful as running the level set segmentation, but it's very local
and
great for quickly segmenting structures - or dealing with
inhomogeneities.
The underlying algorithm is ITK's watershed segmentation. You can
control
the tolerance of the adaptive brush ('granularity' input, lower
values
produce smaller, more cohesive regions). The brush can be used in
2D or 3D.
This feature was inspired by a similar tool in ITKGrey, a tool from
the
Vista Lab at Stanford that itself is a branch of an older version
of
ITK-SNAP. Let us know if this feature works for you. Potentially,
we may add
other algorithms in the future, including running the level set
inside of
the brush.
- Support for image orientation. This is a major step towards NIFTI
compatibility (part of our R03 effort) and something many users
should find
helpful. Formats such as NIFTI, DICOM, and a couple others encode
the
orientation of the image axes in patient space, and even allow
image axes to
not be parallel to the anatomical axes. SNAP now reads this
information from
the image header and uses it to assign anatomical labels and
compute
anatomical coordinates. One of the consequences of this change is
that the
image IO wizard no longer requires specifying an orientation code
(e.g.,
'RAI') when loading an image, since this information is read in the
header.
- A new 'reorient image' dialog has been added, so that if the
orientation
information in the header is wrong, you can change the orientation
and save
the image. For now, the user can only specify reorientations that
are
parallel to the anatomical axes.
- World cursor coordinates (under image information) are now
displayed in
NIFTI / MNI coordinates as well as ITK coordinates. The difference
is that
the NIFTI coordinates incorporate orientation and are in the
(L->R, P->A,
I->S) coordinate frame. ITK coordinates are (x * spacing +
origin), and
ignore orientation.
- 3D Meshes generated and rendered by SNAP are now represented in
NIFTI world
coordinates. Previously, the coordinates were computed using the
formula
x_mesh = x_voxel * spacing + origin
In version 1.8 and beyond, the mesh coordinates are computed as
x_mesh = nifti_sform_matrix * [x_voxel; 1]
This means that the meshes output by earlier versions of SNAP may
be
translated and rotated relative to the meshes output by version
1.8. This will
not affect users who simply view meshes in SNAP; however users who
export
meshes to other programs will be affected.
- Multisession cursor (similar to yoking in MRIcro) now uses these
NIFTI
coordinates rather than ITK coordinates. This is a key feature
because it
enables users to work with MRI scans acquired during the same
session with
different orientations. For example, a coronal T1 scan and an
oblique T2
scan can be loaded in two SNAP instances, and the cursor will be
correctly
linked across the two.
CAVEAT: SNAP's cursor always falls on voxel centers. This means
that the
multisession cursor correspondence is not exact, but rounded to the
nearest
voxel. If in session A you move your cursor, the cursor in session
B will
move to the voxel center closest to the physical position
referenced by the
cursor in session A.
- A new multi-session zoom feature. Similar to the multi-session
cursor, this
allows the zoom level to be maintained across multiple SNAP
sessions. Useful
if you do a lot of zooming in and out when working with a pair of
scans.
This is disabled by default and must be enabled in each SNAP
session using
the checkbox under the 'Zoom/Pan Tool'.
- Changes to how zoom works, related to above. Now 'zoom views
together' is on
by default, meaning that the zoom factor is the same in axial,
coronal and
sagittal windows. Zoom level is specified in px/mm, where px is the
number
of screen pixels (in other words, a metric equivalent of dots per
inch).
Before, zoom was specified in percent, relative to an optimal zoom
that
would best fit all three windows. With the new way you have more
control
over the zoom. For example, if your image has 1mm voxels, you can
have one
to one correspondence between screen pixels and voxels by setting
the zoom
to 1 px/mm.
- Multisession 3D views. When the multisession cursor is selected,
the 3D
views are also synchronized across sessions. This works even if the
images
opened in the two SNAP sessions have different dimensions,
orientation and
spacing. SNAP 3D window now uses NIFTI world coordinates, so as
long as the two
images overlap in world space, so will the 3D views of the two
images. This
feature is useful when comparing two segmentations of the same
image.
- A new ruler display in slice windows. Can be disabled or modified
on the
display options dialog.
- Much better tracking of changes to the segmentation image and
better
promting to save changes before quitting or loading a new image.
The title
bar display is also improved and uses an asterisk to indicate
unsaved
changes.
- The command-line options have been updated. You can now load a
grey image
without using any flags (e.g., itksnap image.nii) and there is a
new '-rgb'
flag for loading an RGB image from command line. The upshot is that
you can
now associate SNAP with image file extensions in the operating
system and
double-click an image file to open it in SNAP.
- A new 'Tools' dialog on the label editor. This dialog is intended
to provide
several tools for merging or modifying labels. The first tool is to
combine
a pair of labels into one. Previously, this was possible using the
3D
scalpel tool, but that was not really an intuitive way to relabel
images.
- As part of above, a new topological merge tool, developed by Nick
Tustison,
Brian Avants and Marcelo Siqueira (I hope I did not forget anyone).
Given
adjacent labels A and B, it will replace most voxels in B with the
label A,
while preserving the topology of A. This tool is used to preserve
topology
during manual segmentation. If A has correct topology and you want
to add
some region to A, label this region with label B, and then grow A
into B
with topology preservation. This is a work in progress, and
feedback would
be welcome on this feature.
- Documented existing keyboard shortcuts and added some new ones.
Available
shortcuts can be listed by selecting Help->Shortcuts.
1.5.2. Programmatic/Distribution Changes
- SNAP is now built against ITK 3.8, offering several improvements,
especially
in how image orientation is handled.
- IPC communications (technology that allows multisession cursor
and zoom) now
has some versioning built into it, so if you are running two
versions of
SNAP, they will not clash.
- On LINUX, we now distribute a .tgz archive instead of a script
installer.
Some people complained about the latter. We can also make .rpm and
.deb
packages although these won't be posted for public download yet.
1.5.3. Bug Fixes
- Level set fix for ITK 3.8 fixes automatic segmentation's weird
behavior
1.6. New in Version 1.6.0.1
---------------------------
1.6.1. Bug Fixes
- Major bug in release 1.6.0 involving disabled cursor movement in
snake
segmentation mode has been resolved.
1.7. New in Version 1.6.0
-------------------------
1.7.1. New Features and UI Improvements
- You can now save a sequence of all axial, coronal or sagittal
slices with
overlays as PNG files (File->Save->Screenshot Series).
- Automatic window and level computation based on the image
histogram. The
window and level are set to the 1st and 99th percentiles of the
intensity
histogram, respectively. This is much more robust to hypo and
hyper-intensity in medical imaging data. The feature is accessed in
the
"Options->Image Contrast" menu (or hit Alt-I in the main
window).
- Cursor synchronization across multiple SNAP sessions (similar to
the Yoke
feature in MRIcro). The mechanism uses POSIX shared memory. Can be
turned
off using the 'Synchronize Cursor' checkbox. Currently, only
enabled in
manual segmentation mode; probably will enable in snake mode in the
near
future.
--- NOTE FOR MacOS Users ---
MacOS doesn't allow you double-click the application icon to open a
new instance. To open multiple instances of ITK-SNAP, you need to
launch
it from the command line.
----------------------------
- SNAP will prompt you before closing if there are unsaved changes.
- A new 'New->Segmentation Image' menu item will clear the
current
segmentation.
- Support for RGB (color) images in SNAP. This is great for
segmenting in DTI
data (manually, for the time being). RGB images can be loaded as
the base
image or as an overlay over the gray. To create these RGB images,
use the new
DTI-TK developed by Hui (Gary) Zhang, available from
http://www.picsl.upenn.edu/resources_dti...
- Segmentations can be exported as VTK meshes (for example, for
loading in
ParaView).
- Multilevel undo/redo functionality for all segmentation
operations (polygon,
paintbrush, freehand, 3D segmentation, 3D cutplane). Undo memory is
preserved when loading new segmentation images.
- Freehand drawing support in polygon mode (hold and drag the mouse
button).
This feature is especially useful for using SNAP on a tablet.
- Added keyboard shortcuts 'a','s','d' for the opacity slider
- Shortened/simplified some of the menu items
1.7.2. Bug Fixes
- Various bugs have been fixed :)
1.7.3. Distribution Changes
- SNAP website fully migrated to sourceforge.net
- Mac Universal binaries supporting Intel and PCC, Tiger and
Leopard are now
available starting with 1.6.0
- Linux binaries will be available starting with 1.6.0
1.8. New in Version 1.4.1
-------------------------
1.8.1. New Features and UI Improvements
- Added paintbrush tool to the main toolbar. Paintbrush can be used
to quickly
touch up segmentations. Left mouse button paints with selected
label, right
button acts as an erasor
- Went through and added/edited tooltips in the program to be more
accurate. It
should be easier to make sense of the program now
- Added a menu option for saving the level set image during active
contour
evolution. This is an important feature because it allows users to
save
segmentations before sub-voxel accuracy is lost. In particular,
this can be
used in conjunction with ParaView to generate meshes from
segmentations.
- You can now save and restore the camera settings in the 3D view
within a
single SNAP session. This can be useful for generating screen shots
of
different segmentation from the same viewpoint. Press 's' in the 3D
window
to save the camera state and 'r' to restore it.
1.8.2. Bug Fixes
- MAJOR: fixed bug that was causing crashes on Win32 during polygon
drawing
(thanks to Jeff Tsao for this bug fix!)
- Fixed problems with the getsnap.sh linux script
- Some menu items were enabled when they should not have been, now
are
disabled.
- Rare bug where speed function very close to 1 was not being
rounded
correctly and may have caused crashes on some systems
- Fixed problem where the screen was blank after loading
preprocessed image
- Fixed crash when changing bubble radius and then going back to
preprocessing mode
1.8.3. Distribution Changes
- Interim SNAP releases are now hosted on SourceForge. ITK
repository will only
be used to host major releases (like 1.6). This allows us to check
stuff in
independently of the ITK code freezes. It also makes it easier to
add new
developers.
- SNAP CMake files should automatically detect when SNAP is being
built
outside of ITK's InsightApplications. This means you can build SNAP
on it's
own and the download size is reduced
1.9. New in Version 1.4
-----------------------
1.9.1. New Features and User Interface Improvements
- New and improved label editor. You can easily switch between
labels while in
the editor and the interface for adding new labels is more
intuitive. You
can now delete labels.
- New and improved interface for intensity reparameterization. The
histogram
display is more visible and you have more control over the number
of bins in
the histogram and the scaling of the bars (linear or log).
- SNAP remembers all settings associated with loading an image.
This means that
any image loaded previously can be reloaded without going throught
the
wizard.
- We've added File->Load Previous menu to let you load images
quickly
- SNAP can now read DICOM file series (experimental support) and it
can read
and write VoxBo CUB image files.
- SNAP remembers more image-associated settings from session to
session. For
example, it will remember the intensity reparameterization that you
last
used. SNAP will also remember the orientation ("RAI" code) that was
last
used to read each image.
- New Image Information window is available under the File menu. It
displays
the size of the image and the current cursor position.
- A color map feature has been added in the automatic segmentation
mode. The
color map lets you select different color schemes for displaying
the
probability map / speed image.
- Small improvements to the active contour 2D example dialog have
been made
- A progress monitor has been added for the 3D renderer in main
SNAP window.
- New buttons allow taking of snapshots in each of the SNAP image
windows
- The tutorial has been updated to reflect the new features.
1.9.2. Bug Fixes.
- SNAP should crash a lot less than before
- The Left-Right orientation should be correctly handled by SNAP.
You still
have to supply the correct orientation ("RAI Code") when loading
the image.
- The bug with the segmentation being shifted when using "Resample
Region"
option has been fixed
- 3D window handles images with non-zero origin better
- Initialization bubbles have been fixed to be floating point
- Lots of other small bugs have been fixed!
1.9.3. Programmatic Enhancements
- SNAP and IRIS now share the sameset of OpenGL windows. This
should prevent
crashes on some platforms.
1.9.4. Other
- SNAP available as a universal (Intel/PPC) binary for MacOS at
itksnap.org
1.10. New in Version 1.2
-----------------------
1.10.1. User Interface Improvements
- The ability to switch between 4-view mode and single view mode.
Each of the
slice views and the 3D view can be expanded to occupy the entire
SNAP window.
- A zoom thumbnail is now displayed when a slice view is zoomed in.
The thumbnail
view can be used to pan the slice.
- User can specify whether he/she prefers to start in linked zoom
mode or in
unlinked zoom mode.
- User can change the appearance of various display elements,
including the
crosshairs, the region of interest selection box, the window
background and
more.
- SNAP automatically determines the image orientation (RAI) when
that information
is available in the image file
- SNAP remembers the last ROI used for each image.
1.10.2. Programmatic Improvements
- The level set segmentation pipeline has been rewritten, taking
advantage of
the stop and go functionality of ITK finite difference filters.
This means
fewer unexplained crashes and simpler code.
- A state-machine has been added to the user interface logic code.
This
machine automatically activates and deactivates UI widgets based on
a set of
flags. Rules such as Flag A => Flag B can be added to the state
machine.
1.10.3. Bug Fixes
- Slice views update correctly when the SNAP window is resized
- Accepting a polygon now works for high resolution images.
- Fixed a crash on some systems when running edge-based snake
segmentation with an
advection term.
2. Known Issues
-----------------
- Active contour evolution fails with small bubbles and thin passed
in
initializations. This seems to be an ITK 4.x bug.
- Some advanced features (annotation mode, label editor advanced
tools) have
not yet been ported to Qt. They will be ported in future versions,
and
expanded in the process. There is a plan to integrate SNAP and C3D
which
will provide much richer image processing support for images and
segmentations.
- The cutplane in the scalpel tool is too big when the camera is
zoomed in and
it needs a flip button. Also with dark labels you can't see the
handle.
- Not all the keyboard shortcuts have been ported yet.
3. Wish List
-----------------
- The ability to perform 2D level set segmentation in each slice
view.
Changes:
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