Cape Town - 2026 ISMRM-ISMRT Annual Meeting and Exhibition - Program at a Glance
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Cape Town - 2026 ISMRM-ISMRT Annual Meeting and Exhibition
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Connect with other registrants for this event through our One Community Hub, included with registration of this event.
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Hours for Friday, May 8
Registration
14:00 - 19:00
Registration Area | Jasminum
Speaker Ready Room
14:00 - 19:00
Speaker Ready Room | Strelitzia
Overview
The ISMRM Annual Meeting & Exhibition is the largest meeting dedicated to magnetic resonance imaging. For more than 25 years, the ISMRM community has grown into a vibrant, collaborative, international, and interdisciplinary society of over 7,500 clinicians, physicists, engineers, biochemists, technologists, and industry professionals from around the world who encourage and promote discovery, innovation, and clinical translation in magnetic resonance. Sessions in this meeting are created from invited faculty talks (educational sessions), reviewed abstract presentations (scientific sessions), or both (“Combined Educational and Scientific” sessions).
This program is a six (6) day CME activity in a live format. Live activities offer attendees the following benefits:
A place to showcase the latest expertise or information;
Real-time lectures by and candid discussions with top expert clinicians, scientists, and technologists—providing interdisciplinary and multidisciplinary education;
Multiple opportunities for attendees to ask questions to enhance their learning;
Dedicated time away from the home or office environment to concentrate on professional training/improvement;
Networking opportunities to strengthen working relationships and address practice issues after the event; and
A broad curriculum with breakout sessions, offering education in multiple practice areas.
The Annual Meeting provides a forum for scientific exchange, interaction between established clinicians, scientists, and trainees, and an opportunity for transfer of updated clinical and scientific information from experts to those practicing our profession worldwide.
Welcome to the 2026 Annual Meeting!
We are delighted to welcome our global community and encourage all attendees to actively engage and share their perspectives—whether you are joining us in Cape Town, at a Mini-Hub, or virtually.
Be sure to explore and participate through the One Community Hub for the Annual Meeting, where you can connect with fellow attendees, access important updates, and enhance your meeting experience.
Your contributions are what make this meeting a success, and we thank you for being part of it.
Plan your week at the Cape Town - 2026 ISMRM-ISMRT Annual Meeting and Exhibition. Browse sessions, search abstracts, and build your personalized schedule.
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Hours for Friday, May 8
Registration
14:00–19:00
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14:00–19:00
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All titles, times & speakers are preliminary and subject to change.
Featured Sessions
Plenary lectures and keynote sessions
PLENARY SESSION
Opening Plenary
Sunday, 10 May
17:30–17:45 SAST
Plenary Hall (Halls 8-10) | CTICC 2
Mark Griswold
Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, United States of America
LECTURE
17:30–17:45
Welcome
Kathryn Keenan
National Institute of Standards and Technology, Boulder, United States of America
PLENARY SESSION
Lauterbur Lecture
Sunday, 10 May
17:45–18:30 SAST
Plenary Hall (Halls 8-10) | CTICC 2
Kirsten Donald
University of Cape Town, Cape Town, South Africa
LECTURE
17:45–18:30
Imaging the Developing Brain at Scale: MRI Insights into Child Neurodevelopment in Low-Resource Settings
Kirsty Donald is a professor of paediatric neurology interested in the determinants of early brain health and development in resource-limited settings like South Africa. She leads the Division of Developmental Paediatrics in the Department of Paediatrics and Child Health at the Red Cross War Memorial Children’s Hospital and is Deputy Director of the Neuroscience Institute at the University of Cape Town. She is a member of the disability policy team for the South African National Department of Health and Social Development and serves the on the UNICEF expert panel for global standard-setting in early childhood development.

Her research covers investigating psychosocial and environmental factors influencing brain health and development including nutrition, infectious exposures, prenatal substance exposures, and maternal mental health, as well as the genetic and phenotypic characterization of neurodevelopmental disorders in the African context. This research is focused on using multiple imaging methods, including structural, functional, and diffusion imaging from infancy to adolescence to facilitate a deeper understanding of the impact of timing of exposures on brain development.

As a member of the UNITY network, Dr. Donald has led a range of studies using low field MRI approaches across 6 different countries in Africa and South Asia to improve neuroimaging accessibility in LMICs. She also holds multiyear grants as PI from large funders including the NIH, BGMF, and Wellcome LEAP to support this work. She is the current chair of the Pediatric Association of Pediatric Neurology and Development of South Africa and president of the International Developmental Pediatrics Association.
PLENARY SESSION
ISMRM Awards
Monday, 11 May
10:40–11:20 SAST
Plenary Hall (Halls 8-10) | CTICC 2
Mark Griswold
Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, United States of America
LECTURE
10:40–11:20
Senior Fellow, Gold Medal, and Distinguished Service Awards
Petra Hüppi
University of Geneva, Geneva, Switzerland
PLENARY SESSION
MRI in Africa: Current State and Future Opportunities
Monday, 11 May
11:20–12:20 SAST
Plenary Hall (Halls 8-10) | CTICC 2
This plenary session will provide an overview of MRI infrastructure, research developments, and clinical applications across Africa. The presentations will highlight current challenges and explore opportunities for international collaboration to enhance MRI capacity and healthcare equity in Africa.
Target Audience:
This session is intended for radiologists, MR physicists, technologists, African healthcare professionals, imaging researchers, and referring clinicians interested in MR applications, education, and research.
Learning Objectives:
• Describe the history and expansion of MRI and radiology across Africa;
• Analyze and evaluate the key challenges affecting MRI access, sustainability, and clinical integration in Africa; and
• Identify opportunities for research, international collaboration, and strategic growth in MRI within the African continent.
Moderators:
Houchun Hu
(Mayo Clinic, Rochester, United States of America)
, Durgesh Dwivedi
(King George's Medical University, Lucknow, India)
Martin Gathogo
kenyatta National Hospital, Nairobi, Kenya
LECTURE
11:20–11:40
MRI in Kenya: A Radiologist’s Perspective
Lydia Sekoli
University of Pretoria, Pretoria, South Africa
LECTURE
11:40–12:00
MRI in South Africa: A Radiographer’s Perspective
Yaw Mensah
Korle Bu Teach Hospital, Accra, Ghana
LECTURE
12:00–12:20
MRI in West Africa: A Ghanaian Radiologist’s Perspective
PLENARY SESSION
NIBIB New Horizons Lecture
Tuesday, 12 May
10:40–11:10 SAST
Plenary Hall (Halls 8-10) | CTICC 2
Maruf Adewole
Medical Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (MAI Lab), Lagos, Nigeria
LECTURE
10:40–11:10
Africa Arising: Advancing MRI for Everyone, Everywhere
Maruf Adewole is a medical physicist and the Executive Director at the Medical Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (MAI Lab) based in Lagos, Nigeria. He is also a postdoctoral scholar at the University of Pennsylvania. His work focuses on advancing AI-driven medical imaging solutions for improved diagnosis in resource-constrained settings.

Through initiatives like NeurON, BraTS-Africa, ABreast, Haske, IMAGINE, SWIM, CONNExIN, and SPARK Academy, he promotes global health equity by advancing MR research, curating inclusive datasets, developing AI methods, building infrastructures, and developing local capacity.

His research bridges medical imaging, radiomics, oncology, and open science to improve diagnostic accessibility and healthcare outcomes across Africa and resource contained settings across the world.
PLENARY SESSION
MRI in Infectious Disease
Tuesday, 12 May
11:10–12:10 SAST
Plenary Hall (Halls 8-10) | CTICC 2
Moderators:
Vikas Gulani
(University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, United States of America)
, Irvin Teh
(University of Leeds, Leeds, United Kingdom)
, Andrew Webb
(Leiden University Medical Center, Leiden, Netherlands)
Karen Chetcuti
Kamuzu University of Health Sciences, Blantyre, Malawi
LECTURE
11:10–11:30
MRI in Paediatric Cerebral Malaria
Allison Hays
Johns Hopkins Univeristy, Baltimore, United States of America
LECTURE
11:30–11:50
Cardiac MRI in HIV: Revealing the Hidden Burden of Cardiovascular Disease
Chandan Das
All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS) Delhi, New Delhi, India
LECTURE
11:50–12:10
MRI in Tuberculosis
PLENARY SESSION
Ernst Plenary
Wednesday, 13 May
10:40–11:10 SAST
Plenary Hall (Halls 8-10) | CTICC 2
This session will feature a discussion between Dr. Mark Griswold, president of the ISMRM, and four young scientists and clinicians about why they are excited to be doing research in MRI along with their view of the future of MRI.
Target Audience:
Anyone attending the ISMRM annual meeting.
Learning Objectives:
• Identify important issues affecting young members of the ISMRM; and
• Describe future prospects for research in MRI.
Moderators:
Mark Griswold
(Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, United States of America)
Louisa Fay
Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, United States of America
LECTURE
10:40–11:10
Signals of Change: A Dialogue About the Future of MRI
Nader Gharbia
La rabta hospital, Tunis, Tunisia
Beatrice Lena
C.J. Gorter MRI Center, Leiden University Medical Center, Netherlands
Mina Park
Yonsei University College of Medicine, Seoul, Korea, Republic of
PLENARY SESSION
Mesoscale MRI
Wednesday, 13 May
11:10–12:10 SAST
Plenary Hall (Halls 8-10) | CTICC 2
Recent hardware developments focusing on ultra-high field strengths and ultra-high performance gradients from multiple vendors have pushed the limits of achievable spatial resolution for human imaging to the mesoscale (100s of microns) while yielding adequate SNR and exquisite detail and contrast. Leveraging these gains has begun to shed new insight into anatomy, function and composition of tissues. The unprecedented resolution that can now be achieved in vivo has the potential to bridge histology with MRI and address open clinical needs which are unmet at standard resolutions. This plenary aims to provide an overview into how mesoscale imaging can be useful in the clinic, what insights can be derived from the preclinical realm, and how new hardware can be fully exploited with tailored pulse sequence and reconstruction algorithms for in vivo imaging at the mesoscale.
Target Audience:
This session targets both physicists and clinicians and tours the state-of-the-art in ultra-high-resolution MRI at the mesoscopic scale, its potential clinical applications in humans, insights from existing preclinical prestudies, and cutting-edge hardware and acquisition/reconstruction methods.
Learning Objectives:
• Assess the limits of spatial resolution and sensitivity achievable with cutting edge hardware and software for imaging the human brain and body in vivo;
• Recognize the potential of mesoscale acquisition techniques in addressing the unmet clinical needs; and
• Differentiate between the capabilities of preclinical systems and human scanners.
Moderators:
Berkin Bilgic
(Athinoula A. Martinos Center for Biomedical Imaging, Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Charlestown, United States of America)
, Christopher Nguyen
(Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland, United States of America)
, Wietske Van der Zwaag
(Royal Netherlands Academy for Arts and Sciences, Amsterdam, Netherlands)
Edson Amaro
Einstein Hospital Israelita, Sao Paulo, Brazil
LECTURE
11:10–11:25
What Does Mesoscale Mean and How Is It Useful in the Clinic?
Manisha Aggarwal
Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, United States of America
LECTURE
11:25–11:40
Insights from Preclinical Imaging
Nicolas Boulant
CEA/Neurospin, Gif-Sur-Yvette, France
LECTURE
11:40–11:55
Hardware Development: State of the Art and What’s on the Horizon
Dan Wu
Zhejiang University, Hangzhou, China
LECTURE
11:55–12:10
Acquisition/Reconstruction Tailored To Take Advantage of Cutting-Edge Hardware
PLENARY SESSION
Young Investigator Awards
Thursday, 14 May
10:50–11:10 SAST
Plenary Hall (Halls 8-10) | CTICC 2
Petra Hüppi
University of Geneva, Geneva, Switzerland
LECTURE
10:50–11:10
Young Investigator Awards Presentation
PLENARY SESSION
Thinking Outside the Scanner Bore: What Are We Missing in the Usual Scanner Environment?
Thursday, 14 May
11:10–12:10 SAST
Plenary Hall (Halls 8-10) | CTICC 2
This session will demonstrate to MR researchers and clinicians how measurements of function and physiology can be affected by the limitations and constraints of the traditional scanner environment, which we often accept and overlook.
Target Audience:
All MR researchers, scientists, technologists, and clinicians.
Learning Objectives:
• Recognize the impact of the traditional environment on measurements of function and physiology;
• Compare diagnostic findings between weight-bearing and supine MRI acquisitions to determine optimal imaging protocols for functional joint assessment in clinical practice;
• Analyze the physiological differences in blood flow and cerebrospinal fluid dynamics between upright and supine patient positioning to predict how scanner orientation impacts measurement accuracy and clinical interpretation; and
• Evaluate the capabilities and limitations of non-traditional MRI hardware designs to formulate implementation strategies that address both technical performance and regulatory considerations for clinical adoption.
Moderators:
Kevin Chan
(Stanford University, Stanford, United States of America)
, Jana Delfino
(US Food and Drug Administration, Silver Spring, United States of America)
, Shella Keilholz
(Emory/Georgia Tech, Atlanta, United States of America)
Emily McWalter
University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, Canada
LECTURE
11:10–11:30
Musculoskeletal MRI Needs To Capture Joints in Action
Tosiaki Miyati
Kanazawa University, Kanazawa, Japan
LECTURE
11:30–11:50
Effects of Gravity and Posture on Functional and Morphological Changes in MRI
MICHAEL GARWOOD
Center for Magnetic Resonance Research, Dept. of Radiology, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, United States of America
LECTURE
11:50–12:10
Unconventional Approaches Toward More Compact and Transportable MRI Scanners
PLENARY SESSION
Closing Plenary
Thursday, 14 May
18:00–18:20 SAST
Plenary Hall (Halls 8-10) | CTICC 2
Petra Hüppi
University of Geneva, Geneva, Switzerland
LECTURE
18:00–18:20
Closing Remarks
PLENARY SESSION
Mansfield Lecture
Thursday, 14 May
18:20–18:50 SAST
Plenary Hall (Halls 8-10) | CTICC 2
Richard Bowtell
University of Nottingham, Nottingham, United Kingdom
LECTURE
18:20–18:50
Playing Around with Magnetic Fields with Some Unsung Heroes of MR
Richard Bowtell is professor of physics and Director of the Sir Peter Mansfield Imaging Centre at the University of Nottingham. After taking a degree in natural sciences in Cambridge, he joined Nottingham in 1984 as a Ph.D. student working under the supervision of Sir Peter Mansfield. He has been a faculty member of Nottingham’s School of Physics and Astronomy since 1989 and served as Head of School from 2008 to 2014.

His research is focused on the development and application of new techniques and hardware for biomedical imaging. He is a Fellow of the ISMRM and of the UK’s Institute of Physics (IOP), a deputy editor of Magnetic Resonance in Medicine and past-president of the European Society of Magnetic Resonance in Medicine and Biology. He was awarded the IOP’s James Joule Medal and Prize in 2020. The Cape Town meeting will be the 38th Annual Meeting of the ISMRM (or its precursor, the SMRM) that he is happy to have attended.
Study Groups
ISMRM Study Group business meetings
Sunday, 10 May
07:45–09:45 SAST
CEST | Electro-Magnetic Tissue Properties (EMTP)
Hall 1A
Motion Detection & Correction | Placenta & Fetus
Hall 1B
MR Contrast Agents | PET/MRI
Ballroom East
Low Field MRI
Ballroom West
MR in Psychiatry | MRI of Neuromodulation
Meeting Room 1.40
MR in Drug Research | Renal MRI
Meeting Room 1.60
09:45–11:45 SAST
MR Spectroscopy
Hall 1A
Body MRI | Pediatric MR
Hall 1B
AI & Machine Learning | Open & Reproducible Research
Ballroom East
Diffusion
Ballroom West
Musculoskeletal MR (MSK)
Meeting Room 1.40
MR Flow and Motion Quantitation
Meeting Room 1.60
13:15–15:15 SAST
MR Engineering | MRI Coils
Hall 1A
Interventional MR | MR in Radiation Therapy
Hall 1B
Metabolomics & Metabolomic Imaging (MMI) | Molecular & Cellular Imaging (MCI) | X-Nuclei Imaging
Ballroom East
Imaging Neurofluids | Perfusion
Ballroom West
Brain Function
Meeting Room 1.40
Quantitative MR
Meeting Room 1.60
15:15–17:15 SAST
White Matter
Hall 1A
Ultra-High Field MR (UHF)
Hall 1B
Cardiac MR
Ballroom East
Hyperpolarization | Pulmonary MR
Ballroom West
MR of Cancer
Meeting Room 1.40
MR Elastography
Meeting Room 1.60
MR Safety
Meeting Room 2.60
ISMRT Sessions
Sessions organized by the ISMRT
Browse All ISMRT Sessions
ISMRT Education Session
Forum I: Innovators and Innovations in Africa
Saturday · 08:00–09:45 SAST
Meeting Room 2.60
ISMRT Education Session
Diamond Sponsor: Guerbet South Africa
Saturday · 09:45–10:20 SAST
Meeting Room 2.60
ISMRT Oral
Winning Research Oral Presentations
Saturday · 10:20–10:50 SAST
Meeting Room 2.60
ISMRT Education Session
President's Lecture
Saturday · 10:50–11:20 SAST
Meeting Room 2.60
ISMRT Oral
Winning Clinical Oral Presentations
Saturday · 11:20–11:50 SAST
Meeting Room 2.60
ISMRT Poster
Winning Poster Presentations
Saturday · 11:50–12:15 SAST
Meeting Room 2.60
ISMRT Poster
Lunch, Exhibition & Poster Tour
Saturday · 12:30–14:00 SAST
Roof Terrace
ISMRT Education Session
Forum II: CMR
Saturday · 14:00–15:30 SAST
Meeting Room 2.60
ISMRT Education Session
Diamond Sponsor: Philips Healthcare
Saturday · 15:50–16:00 SAST
Meeting Room 2.60
ISMRT Education Session
Forum III: MSK
Saturday · 16:00–17:30 SAST
Meeting Room 2.60
ISMRT Education Session
Forum IV: Ethics and Post-Mortem Imaging
Sunday · 08:20–10:00 SAST
Meeting Room 2.60
ISMRT Education Session
Diamond Sponsor: Siemens Healthineers
Sunday · 10:20–10:30 SAST
Meeting Room 2.60
ISMRT Education Session
Forum V: Neuro
Sunday · 10:30–12:00 SAST
Meeting Room 2.60
ISMRT Education Session
ISMRT Business Meeting
Sunday · 12:30–13:00 SAST
Meeting Room 2.60
ISMRT Oral
Awards
Sunday · 13:00–13:50 SAST
Meeting Room 2.60
ISMRT Education Session
Diamond Sponsor: GE HealthCare
Sunday · 13:50–14:00 SAST
Meeting Room 2.60
ISMRT Education Session
Forum VI: AI in MRI
Sunday · 14:00–15:15 SAST
Meeting Room 2.60
ISMRT Education Session
Forum VII: Safety
Monday · 08:20–10:20 SAST
Meeting Room 2.60
ISMRT Education Session
ISMRM-ISMRT Joint Forum
Monday · 13:50–15:30 SAST
Meeting Room 2.60
Registration
Important Deadlines
Early Registration Deadline:
9 April 2026 at 11:59 PM UTC
Register Now
Registration Desk
Registration Area | Jasminum
Fri 8
14:00–19:00
Sat 9
06:30–18:00
Sun 10
07:00–19:00
Mon 11
06:30–18:30
Tue 12
07:00–18:00
Wed 13
07:00–17:45
Thu 14
07:30–17:00
Speaker Ready Room
Speaker Ready Room | Strelitzia
Fri 8
14:00–19:00
Sat 9
06:30–17:00
Sun 10
06:30–18:00
Mon 11
06:30–18:00
Tue 12
06:30–18:00
Wed 13
06:30–18:00
Thu 14
07:30–17:00
Accreditation Information
CME Credit Hours
Preliminary
38.75
CE Credit Hours
Preliminary
18.25
ACCME Accreditation
The International Society for Magnetic Resonance in Medicine is accredited by the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education to provide continuing medical education for physicians.
The International Society for Magnetic Resonance in Medicine designates this live activity for a preliminary maximum of 38.75
AMA PRA Category 1 Credits™
. Physicians should claim only the credit commensurate with the extent of their participation in the activity.
The American Medical Association has an agreement of mutual recognition of Continuing Medical Education (CME) credits with the European Union of Medical Specialists (UEMS), the accreditation body for European countries. Physicians interested in converting
AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™
to UEMS-European Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education CME credits (ECMECs) should contact the UEMS at mutualrecognition@uems.eu.
Activities certified for
AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™
that take place within a member country of the UEMS are not eligible for conversion to ECMECs under this agreement.
ARRT Accreditation
The International Society for MR Radiographers & Technologists (ISMRT), a section of the ISMRM, is recognized by the American Registry of Radiologic Technologists (ARRT) as a Recognized Continuing Education Evaluation Mechanism (RCEEM). This event offers a preliminary maximum of 18.25 Category A CE Credits.
CPD credit endorsement is through the Australian Society of Medical Imaging and Radiation Therapy (ASMIRT) CPD Accreditation, the Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Radiologists (RANZCR), the New Zealand Institute of Medical Radiation Technology (NZIMRT), and the College of Radiographers (CPD NOW), United Kingdom.
The ISMRT Annual Meeting is endorsed by the College of Radiographers (CPD NOW) and may help to support the following outcomes of CPD Now:
[CoR 02] Knowledge base
[CoR 03] Work safely
[CoR 06] Manage knowledge/information
[CoR 07] High-quality healthcare/education services
[CoR 09] Inter-professional/-agency working or learning
[CoR 11] Workforce development or staff governance
[CoR 12] Service design
[CoR 19] Evidence to support practice
[CoR 20] Knowledge and skills in audit /research
View Disclosures
Declarations of Financial Interests
from All Conference Participants
The ISMRM is committed to:
Ensuring balance, independence, objectivity, and scientific rigor in all Continuing Medical Education programs; and
Presenting CME activities that promote improvements or quality in healthcare and are independent of commercial interests.
The International Society for Magnetic Resonance in Medicine (ISMRM) adheres to the policies and guidelines, including the Standards for Integrity and Independence in Accredited CE, stating those activities where continuing education credits are awarded must be balanced, independent, objective, and scientifically rigorous. All persons in a position to control the content of an accredited continuing education program provided by the ISMRM are required to disclose all financial relationships with any ineligible company within the past 24 months to the ISMRM. All financial relationships reported are identified as relevant and mitigated by the ISMRM in advance of delivery of the activity to learners. The content of this activity was vetted by the ISMRM to assure objectivity and that the activity is free of commercial bias. All relevant financial relationships have been mitigated by the ISMRM.
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Awards
Presentations recognized with awards at this conference.
AMPC Selected
68
466-05-004
Characterising neurodevelopment in low and middle-income settings with ultra-low field MRI.
Firehiwot Abate — Addis Continental Institute of Public Health
Tue 12 May 16:00
Digital Posters Row G
Pediatric Low Field MRI
303-01-002
Initial Clinical Evaluation of DeepAcq: Ultra-Fast Multi-Contrast MRI and T₁/T₂ Mapping in Multiple Sclerosis
Beril Alyuz — Cedars-Sinai Medical Center
Mon 11 May 08:20
Auditorium 1
AI Methods Beyond Reconstruction
602-02-002
Diffusion-Relaxation Correlation Spectroscopic MRI for Characterizing Prostate Cancer versus Whole-Mount Histopathology
Elif Aygun — David Geffen School of Medicine, University of California Los Angeles, Los Angeles
Thu 14 May 13:40
Hall 1B
Prostate MRI: Methodological Developments
502-04-006
Advanced Diffusion-Weighted Imaging Markers for Prediction of Breast Cancer Treatment Response in a Multisite Trial
Debosmita Biswas — University of Washington
Wed 13 May 16:00
Hall 1B
New Developments in Breast MRI
603-03-009
Body fat distribution predicts cardiometabolic risk in healthy non-obese individuals: an opportunistic screening approach
Balazs Bogner — University Medical Center Freiburg — Department of Diagnostic and Interventional Radiology
Thu 14 May 16:00
Auditorium 1
AI for Diagnostic and Prognostic Applications
605-03-002
Improving Amyloid Detection and Brain PET Image Quality Using MR-Guided Reconstruction on Integrated PET/MR
Yu Cai — Zhongda Hospital, School of Medicine, Southeast University
Thu 14 May 16:00
Ballroom West
Next-Generation Neuroimaging for Alzheimer’s Disease: From Molecules to Networks
630-01-003
Multi-Compartment Relaxometry for myelin water imaging with magnetic susceptibility source separation (MCR-MWI-Chisep)
Kwok-Shing Chan — Athinoula A. Martinos Center for Biomedical Imaging, Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School
Thu 14 May 08:30
Meeting Room 2.60
Quantitative Susceptibility Mapping: From Phase to Tissue Properties
431-03-002
Can slice-GRAPPA enable water-fat separation in single-shot EPI for diffusion MRI?
Yiming Dong — Leiden University Medical Center
Tue 12 May 16:00
Roof Terrace
Image Reconstruction
431-03-002
Can slice-GRAPPA enable water-fat separation in single-shot EPI for diffusion MRI?
Yiming Dong — Leiden University Medical Center
Tue 12 May 16:00
Roof Terrace
Image Reconstruction
408-04-004
Online 3D-MRF for Population-Scale Quantitative Neuroimaging: A 3,849-Exam Clinical Deployment
Andrew Dupuis — Case Western Reserve University
Tue 12 May 16:00
Meeting Room 1.60
Quantitative Imaging: MR Fingerprinting
405-03-007
First human subject images with a sealed, low-cryogen, high-performance head-only 7T MRI scanner (Compact 7T)
Thomas Foo — GE HealthCare Technology and Innovation Center
Tue 12 May 13:40
Ballroom West
Ultra-High Field Hardware and Systems
505-03-002
Cortical myeloarchitectural types in a 75μm isotropic whole human brain ex-vivo dataset
Johannes Franz — Maastricht University
Wed 13 May 13:40
Ballroom West
Teasing Out the Microstructure of the Brain and Nervous System
568-01-007
Infrared control signaling for a fully wireless stand-alone RF coil with analog optical signal transfer
Roberta Frass-Kriegl — Medical University of Vienna
Wed 13 May 08:20
Digital Posters Row I
Unconventional Physics and Engineering
601-02-004
Effect of gradient non-linearity correction on whole leg Diffusion tensor imaging
Martijn Froeling — University Medical Center Utrecht
Thu 14 May 13:40
Hall 1A
Muscle MRI in Health and Disease: From Standardization to Application
604-01-005
Investigations on RF Shimming with a 16-Channel Coaxial-End Dipole Array for Combined Head and C-spine MRI at 9.4T
Felix Glang — Graz University of Technology
Thu 14 May 08:30
Ballroom East
Advanced MRI Techniques for Spinal Cord Structure, Function, and Physiology
402-02-007
What is the effect of a breath-hold on renal BOLD MRI scans?
Anna Griffith — The University of Sheffield
Tue 12 May 08:20
Hall 1B
Inside the Bean: Advances in Renal MRI
530-03-001
High-Bandwidth PRF-Shift MR Thermometry for Temperature Imaging Near Metal
William Grissom — Case Western Reserve University
Wed 13 May 13:40
Meeting Room 2.60
Interventional MRI: Tracking, Temperature Mapping, and Image-Guided Therapy
503-01-003
Permeability changes measured by dynamic contrast enhancement and revascularization surgery in patients with moyamoya disease
Shoko Hara — Institute of Science Tokyo
Wed 13 May 08:20
Auditorium 1
Innovative Methods To Understand Stroke
462-05-003
A Resonance-Tuned Butterfly Wireless Array for 3 T Prostate MRI
Shahzeb Hayat — Paul C. Lauterbur Research Center for Biomedical Imaging, Shenzhen Institute of Advanced Technology, Chinese Academy of Sciences
Tue 12 May 16:00
Digital Posters Row C
Interventional MRI: Device, Catheter Tracking, and Image-Guided Therapy
401-02-002
A Unified Vision-Language Foundation Model for Multi-Task MRI Application
Xingxin He — Harvard Medical School
Tue 12 May 08:20
Hall 1A
Foundation Models
406-03-008
Disrupted Brainstem Functional Architecture in Aging and in Isolated REM Sleep Behavior Disorder
Lin Hua — Athinoula A. Martinos Center for Biomedical Imaging, Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School
Tue 12 May 16:00
Auditorium 2
fMRI: Applications in Neurology
462-04-001
Swimming Attenuates Paraspinal Muscle Degeneration in Rats with Discogenic Low Back Pain: A Multimodal MRI Study
Jiaqiu Jiang — Department of Medical Imaging,the First Affiliated Hospital of Kunming Medical University
Tue 12 May 14:35
Digital Posters Row C
Body, Cardiovascular, and Musculoskeletal Systems in Small Animals
430-03-002
Physics-Driven MRI Reconstruction with Autoregressive State-Space Modelling
Bilal Kabas — Bilkent University
Tue 12 May 13:40
Meeting Room 2.60
Advanced Image Reconstruction
606-03-004
Infant Brain Growth from Portable uLF MRI in LMICs: Site, Sex, and Nutrition Effects in the First 1,000 Days
Sidra Kaleem — Aga Khan University
Thu 14 May 16:00
Auditorium 2
Low Field MRI Applications
404-02-009
Deuterium metabolic imaging for assessing response to chemoradiotherapy in high grade glioma: a multisite study
Alixander Khan — Aarhus University
Tue 12 May 08:20
Ballroom East
Altered Metabolism Across Healthy Aging and Neurological Disorders
608-01-009
Abbreviated Cardiovascular MR (aCMR) for Efficient and Comprehensive Etiology Diagnosis of Acute Ischemic Stroke
Qingle Kong — University of Southern California
Thu 14 May 08:30
Meeting Room 1.60
Vessel Wall Imaging
568-01-002
A 7T MRI-Compatible Piano for Neuroscientific Research
Nicolas Kutscha — Max Planck Institute for Empirical Aesthetics
Wed 13 May 08:20
Digital Posters Row I
Unconventional Physics and Engineering
607-03-003
Fast design of safe spirals on the scanner
David Leitão — King's College London
Thu 14 May 16:00
Meeting Room 1.40
New Pulse Sequences and Signal Modeling Designs
605-03-006
Limbic Neurometabolic Network Segregation Underlies Cognitive Resilience in Alzheimer’s Disease
Wenli Li — Shanghai Jiao Tong University
Thu 14 May 16:00
Ballroom West
Next-Generation Neuroimaging for Alzheimer’s Disease: From Molecules to Networks
502-03-002
Comprehensive multi-modal MRI templates of the infant brain: a foundational resource for infant brain research
Ruolin Li — University of Pennsylvania
Wed 13 May 13:40
Hall 1B
Defining "Normal" in Pediatric Brain MRI
507-04-008
Test-time optimization for cortical surface reconstruction across image resolutions/contrasts using untrained neural networks
Haoxiang Li — Tsinghua University
Wed 13 May 16:00
Meeting Room 1.40
Advanced Segmentation in MRI Across Scales and Domains
601-03-006
A High-Resolution Deuterium Metabolic Imaging and Unsupervised Clustering Framework for Unraveling Intratumoral Heterogeneity
Xinjie Liu — Innovation Academy for Precision Measurement Science and Technology,CAS
Thu 14 May 16:00
Hall 1A
Spectroscopy and Spectroscopic Imaging
304-02-001
High-SNR Whole-Brain Mesoscale Diffusion MRI Using Rotating-View Acquisitions (ROVER-dMRI)
Qiang Liu — Brigham and Women's Hospital and Harvard Medical School
Mon 11 May 08:20
Ballroom East
Diffusion Acquisition and Reconstruction
403-01-004
Combined MR – histology – micron-resolution fiber mapping towards multimodal microscopic validation of MRI
Andy Liu — Stanford Medicine
Tue 12 May 08:20
Auditorium 1
Diffusion Tractography
405-02-004
Paramagnetic Changes in Multiple Sclerosis: Imaging-Pathology Correlations
Kedar Mahajan — Cleveland Clinic
Tue 12 May 08:20
Ballroom West
What's New in Multiple Sclerosis?
505-02-001
Identifying network states linked to the therapeutic efficacy of deep brain stimulation for OCD
David Mikhael — University Of California, San Francisco (UCSF)
Wed 13 May 08:20
Ballroom West
Insights into Psychiatric Disorders and the Human Connectome
405-04-003
Signatures of structural disorder in axons and glial processes in human white matter using time-dependent diffusion MRS
Jessie Mosso — New York University Grossman School of Medicine
Tue 12 May 16:00
Ballroom West
From Diffusion Characteristics Toward Clinical Impact
302-02-001
Functional lung MRI during tachypnea detects changes in regional ventilation after dual bronchodilator treatment in COPD
Robin Müller — German Center for Lung Research (DZL)
Mon 11 May 08:20
Hall 1B
Take a Breath: Chest, Thoracic, and Pulmonary MRI
608-03-005
T1 and T2 mapping of the human brain across magnetic field strengths from 0.047 T to 7.0 T
Martijn Nagtegaal — Leiden University Medical Center
Thu 14 May 16:00
Meeting Room 1.60
Quantitative Imaging: Multiparametric and Synthetic MRI
630-03-004
Arrhythmia-Resolved Heart-Brain Hemodynamic Relationships in Atrial Fibrillation: A Feasibility Study
Anahita Najafi — Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine
Thu 14 May 16:00
Meeting Room 2.60
Hemodynamics and Flow
506-01-002
Battery-Powered Portable MRI For Low-Resource Settings
Mary Nassejje — Institute for Molecular Imaging and Instrumentation (i3M), Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas & Universitat Politècnica de València
Wed 13 May 08:20
Auditorium 2
Low Field MRI Hardware
302-03-009
AI-guided autonomous fetal MRI
Sara Neves Silva — King's College London
Mon 11 May 13:50
Hall 1B
Next-Level Pediatric MRI: Technical Advances To Image Children Better
302-04-006
AI-Based Detection of Liver Iron Overload and Steatosis from MRI Localizers
Yura Oh — University of Wisconsin - Madison
Mon 11 May 16:10
Hall 1B
Mapping Liver and Pancreas Health
503-03-001
All-in-One DeepGrasp: A Unified Self-Supervised Model for Accelerated 4D Radial MRI Across Organs, Resolutions, and Dynamics
Haoyang Pei — Bernard and Irene Schwartz Center for Biomedical Imaging, Department of Radiology, New York University Grossman School of Medicine, New York, New York
Wed 13 May 16:00
Auditorium 1
AI: Emerging Techniques and Clinical Applications
505-04-002
Layer-fMRI at 0.39 mm isotropic meets vascular mapping at 0.35 mm isotropic: Partners or Confounders?
Alessandra Pizzuti — Maastricht University
Wed 13 May 16:00
Ballroom West
Mesoscale Functional MRI
405-04-002
Characterization and longitudinal assessment of myocardial microstructure in ICI myocarditis using ultra-high-gradient cDTI
Xianling Qian — Zhongshan Hospital, Fudan University
Tue 12 May 16:00
Ballroom West
From Diffusion Characteristics Toward Clinical Impact
404-04-003
Data-driven staging and subtyping reveal spatiotemporal trajectories of brain iron in Parkinson’s disease
Jianmei Qin — Second Affiliated Hospital, School of Medicine, Zhejiang University
Tue 12 May 16:00
Ballroom East
Applications of QSM and Iron in the Brain
403-02-002
Analysis of the Information Contribution of Different Contrast Scans in an MRI Examination aided by Content/style Modeling
Chinmay Rao — Leiden University Medical Center
Tue 12 May 13:40
Auditorium 1
AI-Enabled Image Synthesis and Translation
404-02-001
Neurochemical Indicators of Cognitive Performance assessed by 7T MR Spectroscopy in the Aging Adult Brain Connectome Cohort
Eva-Maria Ratai — Athinoula A. Martinos Center for Biomedical Imaging, Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School
Tue 12 May 08:20
Ballroom East
Altered Metabolism Across Healthy Aging and Neurological Disorders
331-01-013
Social status individualizes brain connectome dynamics to buffer negative hippocampal recall
Jonathan Reinwald — Central Institute of Mental Health, Medical Faculty Mannheim, Heidelberg University
Mon 11 May 08:20
Roof Terrace
Neuro Imaging and Metabolism
331-01-013
Social status individualizes brain connectome dynamics to buffer negative hippocampal recall
Jonathan Reinwald — Central Institute of Mental Health, Medical Faculty Mannheim, Heidelberg University
Mon 11 May 08:20
Roof Terrace
Neuro Imaging and Metabolism
305-04-009
Accuracy and Sensitivity of 3D qDESS in T2-mapping of Skeletal Muscle Before and After Exercise-induced Increases in T2
Gabriel Rossetto — Newcastle University
Mon 11 May 16:10
Ballroom West
MRI of Musculoskeletal Kinematics, Biomechanics, and Exercise
406-01-005
A new paradigm for whole-night sleep neuroimaging using a wearable coil and quiet BOLD acquisition
Omer Sharon — University of California
Tue 12 May 08:20
Auditorium 2
fMRI: Acquisition and Preprocessing
304-04-003
Going wearable in simultaneous EEG-fMRI at 7T: 8TxRx dipole antenna combined with a 10Rx-only twisted-pair coil array
Elizaveta Shegurova — CIBM Center for Biomedical Imaging
Mon 11 May 16:10
Ballroom East
Multimodal and Innovative Design
409-03-003
UTE-MRI Detects Increased Fat Deposition in Cortical Pores of Diabetic Bones
Soo Hyun Shin — University of California
Tue 12 May 13:40
Meeting Room 2.40
Quantitative Imaging: Applications
401-04-003
Direct dynamic 2H MRSI and metabolic modelling for 3D characterization of glucose oxidative metabolism in rats brain
Alessio Siviglia — CIBM Center for Biomedical Imaging
Tue 12 May 16:00
Hall 1A
Metabolism
606-01-004
In-vivo mapping of whole-brain venous angioarchitecture and T2* at 350 microns with servo navigation and pTX at 7T and 11.7T
Rüdiger Stirnberg — German Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases (DZNE e.V.)
Thu 14 May 08:30
Auditorium 2
Ultra-High Field Applications
605-01-009
Motion-robust biventricular cardiac function assessment via novel 4D CINE by real-time MRI and slice-to-volume reconstruction
Ye Tian — University of Southern California
Thu 14 May 08:30
Ballroom West
Motion Correction Across the Lifespan
305-03-004
Integrated local B0-B1 array: a portable acceleration platform with nonlinear gradient waves numerically optimized in k-space
Rui Tian — Max Planck Institute for Biological Cybernetics
Mon 11 May 13:50
Ballroom West
Hybrid and Novel Systems
603-03-007
Context is everything: Reducing false positives in longitudinal health assessment using deep learning with prior information
Lavanya Umapathy — Center for Advanced Imaging Innovation and Research (CAI²R), New York University Grossman School of Medicine
Thu 14 May 16:00
Auditorium 1
AI for Diagnostic and Prognostic Applications
406-02-004
Distinct pressure- and flow-driven propagation pathways of low-frequency oscillations in the human brain
Adam Wright — Purdue University
Tue 12 May 13:40
Auditorium 2
The Dynamic Brain: Flow, Pressure, and Exchange
407-04-009
Quantification of Infrapatellar Fat Pad Fatty Acid Composition across ACLR and KOA Cohorts using CSE-MRI at 5T
Siyi Wu — Shenzhen Institutes of Advanced Technology, Chinese Academy of Sciences
Tue 12 May 16:00
Meeting Room 1.40
New Outcome Measures for Studying the Joint
507-04-001
Physics-Guided Few-Shot Learnable Active Contour Model for Quantitative Body Composition Analysis on MRI PDFF images
Lin Yang — Shenzhen Institutes of Advanced Technology, Chinese Academy of Sciences
Wed 13 May 16:00
Meeting Room 1.40
Advanced Segmentation in MRI Across Scales and Domains
608-01-002
REACT-MAX: Comprehensive Vascular Evaluation with Non-Contrast Angiography, Vessel-Wall, and Calcification MRI in One Scan
Masami Yoneyama — Philips Japan
Thu 14 May 08:30
Meeting Room 1.60
Vessel Wall Imaging
409-03-001
Repeatability and reproducibility of knee cartilage T1ρ and T2 mapping: A multi-site multi-vendor study by QMIC
Zhiyuan Zhang — Cleveland Clinic
Tue 12 May 13:40
Meeting Room 2.40
Quantitative Imaging: Applications
406-02-006
Distinct Hydrodynamic and Hemodynamic Drivers in the Brain Parenchyma Revealed by Multi-modal Dynamic MRI
Jianing Zhang — Indiana University School of Medicine
Tue 12 May 13:40
Auditorium 2
The Dynamic Brain: Flow, Pressure, and Exchange
307-04-002
Efficient High-Resolution Fat-Fraction Mapping for Myocardial Fat and Semaglutide Response in a Porcine HFpEF Model
Xinheng Zhang — Cedars-Sinai Medical Center
Mon 11 May 16:10
Meeting Room 1.40
Heart Failure
501-03-002
Cortex-Inspired Hierarchical Reconstruction of Visual Stimuli from fMRI Signals
Shiyi Zhang — Shenzhen Institutes of Advanced Technology, Chinese Academy of Sciences
Wed 13 May 13:40
Hall 1A
fMRI: Advanced Analysis
Summa Cum Laude
131
605-01-007
Towards dynamic arterial diameter measurements in humans with high-resolution motion-robust 1D line-scanning
Shahrokh Abbasi-Rad — Massachusetts General Hospital
Thu 14 May 08:30
Ballroom West
Motion Correction Across the Lifespan
403-01-008
High‑Resolution Diffusion Tractography Shows Altered Superficial White Matter in Multiple Sclerosis Across the Lifespan
Alejandro Acosta — University of Alberta
Tue 12 May 08:20
Auditorium 1
Diffusion Tractography
301-04-001
Joint Spatiotemporal Phase Unwrapping and Background Field Removal for QSM via Physics-Constrained Optimization
Asli Alpman — University of California
Mon 11 May 16:10
Hall 1A
Innovations in Contrast Mechanisms for MRI
303-01-002
Initial Clinical Evaluation of DeepAcq: Ultra-Fast Multi-Contrast MRI and T₁/T₂ Mapping in Multiple Sclerosis
Beril Alyuz — Cedars-Sinai Medical Center
Mon 11 May 08:20
Auditorium 1
AI Methods Beyond Reconstruction
304-02-008
Reconstructing High-b-Value DWI from a Single Average Using Low-b-Value Side Information
Arda Atalik — New York University
Mon 11 May 08:20
Ballroom East
Diffusion Acquisition and Reconstruction
602-02-002
Diffusion-Relaxation Correlation Spectroscopic MRI for Characterizing Prostate Cancer versus Whole-Mount Histopathology
Elif Aygun — David Geffen School of Medicine, University of California Los Angeles, Los Angeles
Thu 14 May 13:40
Hall 1B
Prostate MRI: Methodological Developments
503-03-003
AdaSamp: Towards simple, subject-specific Adaptive Sampling for 3D Accelerated MRI
Jaehyeok Bae — Stanford University
Wed 13 May 16:00
Auditorium 1
AI: Emerging Techniques and Clinical Applications
401-04-002
Decoding Tumor-Specific Metabolic Rewiring in Prostate Cancer through ¹H NMR Metabolomics
Shivalika Bahukhandi — All India Institute of Medical Sciences
Tue 12 May 16:00
Hall 1A
Metabolism
404-04-006
Revisiting the Role of Tyrosinase in Human Neuromelanin Formation Using NM-MRI in Oculocutaneous Albinism Type 1
Alexis BARON — Paris Brain Institute - ICM
Tue 12 May 16:00
Ballroom East
Applications of QSM and Iron in the Brain
502-04-006
Advanced Diffusion-Weighted Imaging Markers for Prediction of Breast Cancer Treatment Response in a Multisite Trial
Debosmita Biswas — University of Washington
Wed 13 May 16:00
Hall 1B
New Developments in Breast MRI
507-03-003
Endogenous CEST Signals Enable Simultaneous In Vivo pH and Temperature Mapping: A Proof-of-Principle Study
Philip Boyd — German Cancer Research Center (DKFZ)
Wed 13 May 13:40
Meeting Room 1.40
New Frontiers in CEST MRI
351-01-017
Non-invasive mapping of ultrasound wavefronts using radiofrequency magnetic resonance hydrophone (RF-MRH)
Theodore Brierre — Athinoula A. Martinos Center for Biomedical Imaging, Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School
Mon 11 May 08:20
Power Pitch Theatre 1
Emerging Devices, Novel Capabilities
351-01-017
Non-invasive mapping of ultrasound wavefronts using radiofrequency magnetic resonance hydrophone (RF-MRH)
Theodore Brierre — Athinoula A. Martinos Center for Biomedical Imaging, Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School
Mon 11 May 08:20
Power Pitch Theatre 1
Emerging Devices, Novel Capabilities
351-03-015
Anatomically Guided Source Localization of Uterine Peristalsis Using T1-Weighted MRI and Electrohysterography
Maria Bustos-Vivas — University Hospital Erlangen, Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg (FAU)
Mon 11 May 16:10
Power Pitch Theatre 1
AI Methods
351-03-015
Anatomically Guided Source Localization of Uterine Peristalsis Using T1-Weighted MRI and Electrohysterography
Maria Bustos-Vivas — University Hospital Erlangen, Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg (FAU)
Mon 11 May 16:10
Power Pitch Theatre 1
AI Methods
306-02-001
Validity of the Gaussian phase approximation (GPA): Analytical results for the constant gradient spin echo in one dimension
Teddy Cai — Eunice Kennedy Shriver - National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD)
Mon 11 May 13:50
Auditorium 2
From Theory to Clinic: Advances in Diffusion MRI Modeling and Analysis
630-01-003
Multi-Compartment Relaxometry for myelin water imaging with magnetic susceptibility source separation (MCR-MWI-Chisep)
Kwok-Shing Chan — Athinoula A. Martinos Center for Biomedical Imaging, Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School
Thu 14 May 08:30
Meeting Room 2.60
Quantitative Susceptibility Mapping: From Phase to Tissue Properties
608-03-006
MWF-MIMOSA for Highly-efficient Joint Relaxometry and Myelin Water Fraction Mapping
Yuting Chen — College of Optical Science and Engineering, Zhejiang University
Thu 14 May 16:00
Meeting Room 1.60
Quantitative Imaging: Multiparametric and Synthetic MRI
430-02-007
An open-source workflow for MRI data acquisition and reconstruction using Pulseq: multi-site and cross-vendor validation
Qingping Chen — University Medical Center Freiburg, Faculty of Medicine, University of Freiburg
Tue 12 May 08:20
Meeting Room 2.60
Novel Acquisition Strategies and Open-Source Sequences
607-01-006
Fully Automatic Left Atrial Strain Quantification via Multi-Task Learning on Cardiac Cine MRI
Haiyang Chen — National Engineering Research Center of Advanced Magnetic Resonance Technologies for Diagnosis and Therapy, School of Biomedical Engineering, Shanghai Jiao Tong University, Shanghai
Thu 14 May 08:30
Meeting Room 1.40
Advanced Cardiac Quantification Methods
430-02-003
High-resolution directional CSF velocity quantification in humans at 7T
Madda Debiasi — Leiden University Medical Center
Tue 12 May 08:20
Meeting Room 2.60
Novel Acquisition Strategies and Open-Source Sequences
630-01-002
Decomposition of susceptibility sources identifies novel paramagnetic edema regions of glioblastoma
Giulia Debiasi — University of California, Berkeley
Thu 14 May 08:30
Meeting Room 2.60
Quantitative Susceptibility Mapping: From Phase to Tissue Properties
605-02-009
Deep Learning-based Automatic Ripple artifact Reduction with Optimal Wavelet-domain filtering (DL-ARROW)
Jeanette Deck — University of Zurich
Thu 14 May 13:40
Ballroom West
Artifacts and Correction Strategies
605-03-003
Cerebral blood flow decline in neurodegeneration using a healthy reference normative model
Mathijs Dijsselhof — Amsterdam University Medical Center, University of Amsterdam
Thu 14 May 16:00
Ballroom West
Next-Generation Neuroimaging for Alzheimer’s Disease: From Molecules to Networks
409-03-005
Improved QQ-based Oxygen Extraction Fraction Mapping through Temporal Signal Evaluation Modeling: QQ-S
Liukailai Ding — George Washington University
Tue 12 May 13:40
Meeting Room 2.40
Quantitative Imaging: Applications
431-03-002
Can slice-GRAPPA enable water-fat separation in single-shot EPI for diffusion MRI?
Yiming Dong — Leiden University Medical Center
Tue 12 May 16:00
Roof Terrace
Image Reconstruction
431-03-002
Can slice-GRAPPA enable water-fat separation in single-shot EPI for diffusion MRI?
Yiming Dong — Leiden University Medical Center
Tue 12 May 16:00
Roof Terrace
Image Reconstruction
505-03-005
Modelling the impact of white matter hyperintensities on normal appearing white matter
Ethan Draper — Montreal Neurological Institute
Wed 13 May 13:40
Ballroom West
Teasing Out the Microstructure of the Brain and Nervous System
408-04-004
Online 3D-MRF for Population-Scale Quantitative Neuroimaging: A 3,849-Exam Clinical Deployment
Andrew Dupuis — Case Western Reserve University
Tue 12 May 16:00
Meeting Room 1.60
Quantitative Imaging: MR Fingerprinting
606-01-001
Non-invasive Characterization of Perivascular Subarachnoid Spaces
Nina Fultz — C.J. Gorter MRI Center, Leiden University Medical Center
Thu 14 May 08:30
Auditorium 2
Ultra-High Field Applications
302-04-002
A Liver-Specific Manganese-Based Contrast Agent Detects MASH by Dual PET/MR Imaging
Mohammad Ghaderian — University Hospital Tuebingen
Mon 11 May 16:10
Hall 1B
Mapping Liver and Pancreas Health
401-03-007
Unlocking the Spin-Lock: Open-Source and Vendor-Agnostic Cardiac T1ρ Fingerprinting with Pulseq
Maximilian Gram — University Hospital Würzburg
Tue 12 May 13:40
Hall 1A
End-to-End Software Innovation
530-03-008
A Patient-specific Cross-attention Future Orthogonal Planes (CAFOP) Framework for Adaptive MRI-guided Radiation Therapy
James Grover — The University of Sydney
Wed 13 May 13:40
Meeting Room 2.60
Interventional MRI: Tracking, Temperature Mapping, and Image-Guided Therapy
406-03-003
Dynamics of Resting-state Brain Networks and Associated Entropy is Sensitive to White Matter Hyperintensity Load
Niraj Gupta — Indian Institute of Science Education and Research (IISER) Berhampur
Tue 12 May 16:00
Auditorium 2
fMRI: Applications in Neurology
368-03-003
MagTetris+: A rapid simulator for magnetic field and force calculation for ferromagnetic materials and permanent magnets
Jing Han Heng — Singapore University of Technology and Design
Mon 11 May 13:50
Digital Posters Row I
Low Field Systems and Applications
507-03-004
Application of quantitative guanidinium CEST-based pH mapping in healthy and pathological leg muscles at 3T
Valentin Henriet — Paris
Wed 13 May 13:40
Meeting Room 1.40
New Frontiers in CEST MRI
303-03-008
Classification of Glioma Subtypes Using 7T MR Spectroscopic Imaging
Sara Huskic — Medical University of Vienna
Mon 11 May 16:10
Auditorium 1
Advanced Tumor Imaging: Bridging Research and Clinical Practice
606-01-002
Multiphoton Parallel Transmission at 7T Using Oscillating Gradients
Tanya Deniz Ipek — University of California
Thu 14 May 08:30
Auditorium 2
Ultra-High Field Applications
503-01-004
Evaluation of Cerebral Oxygen Metabolism in Patients with Carotid Steno-occlusive Disease by 3D Constrained Quantitative BOLD
Kathryn Jaroszynski — University of Pennsylvania
Wed 13 May 08:20
Auditorium 1
Innovative Methods To Understand Stroke
631-03-003
Approaching the Diffusion Short-Time Limit Using a Human Breast Gradient Coil with Ultra-High Gradients
Pablo Jimenez — German Cancer Research Center (DKFZ)
Thu 14 May 16:00
Roof Terrace
Diffusion Acquisition and Reconstruction
631-03-003
Approaching the Diffusion Short-Time Limit Using a Human Breast Gradient Coil with Ultra-High Gradients
Pablo Jimenez — German Cancer Research Center (DKFZ)
Thu 14 May 16:00
Roof Terrace
Diffusion Acquisition and Reconstruction
430-03-002
Physics-Driven MRI Reconstruction with Autoregressive State-Space Modelling
Bilal Kabas — Bilkent University
Tue 12 May 13:40
Meeting Room 2.60
Advanced Image Reconstruction
507-04-005
Age-Conditioned Neonatal Choroid Plexus Segmentation using Adaptive Conditional Instance Normalization
Junghwa Kang — Hankuk university of Foreign Studies
Wed 13 May 16:00
Meeting Room 1.40
Advanced Segmentation in MRI Across Scales and Domains
408-04-006
Cardiac MRF Optimization at 3T Using Rosette Trajectories and MT Modeling in OpenMRF
Sydney Kaplan — University of Michigan
Tue 12 May 16:00
Meeting Room 1.60
Quantitative Imaging: MR Fingerprinting
551-01-011
A Comparison of Tissue Property Values Estimated using Conventional Cardiac MRF and MT-Cardiac MRF
Sydney Kaplan — University of Michigan
Wed 13 May 08:20
Power Pitch Theatre 1
Frontiers in Cardiovascular MR
551-01-011
A Comparison of Tissue Property Values Estimated using Conventional Cardiac MRF and MT-Cardiac MRF
Sydney Kaplan — University of Michigan
Wed 13 May 08:20
Power Pitch Theatre 1
Frontiers in Cardiovascular MR
404-02-009
Deuterium metabolic imaging for assessing response to chemoradiotherapy in high grade glioma: a multisite study
Alixander Khan — Aarhus University
Tue 12 May 08:20
Ballroom East
Altered Metabolism Across Healthy Aging and Neurological Disorders
507-02-001
Harmonization for a Black-box Model using Disentanglement-based Generator and Bayesian Optimization
Minjun Kim — Seoul National University
Wed 13 May 08:20
Meeting Room 1.40
Generative Modeling: A Unifying Lens on MRI
604-02-002
Cerebral hemodynamics in white matter lesions and their penumbra in older adults using 7T arterial spin labeling MRI
Jan Kufer — Athinoula A. Martinos Center for Biomedical Imaging, Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School
Thu 14 May 13:40
Ballroom East
Perfusion, Flow, and Hemodynamics Across Scales
351-03-013
Spatially-Aware Neural Controlled Differential Equations for IVIM MRI Parameter Estimation in Esophageal Cancer Patients
Daan Kuppens — Amsterdam University Medical Center, University of Amsterdam
Mon 11 May 16:10
Power Pitch Theatre 1
AI Methods
351-03-013
Spatially-Aware Neural Controlled Differential Equations for IVIM MRI Parameter Estimation in Esophageal Cancer Patients
Daan Kuppens — Amsterdam University Medical Center, University of Amsterdam
Mon 11 May 16:10
Power Pitch Theatre 1
AI Methods
605-03-007
Clinically feasible SANDI MRI for early identification of neurodegeneration in Alzheimer’s disease
Hansol Lee — Athinoula A. Martinos Center for Biomedical Imaging, Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School
Thu 14 May 16:00
Ballroom West
Next-Generation Neuroimaging for Alzheimer’s Disease: From Molecules to Networks
607-03-003
Fast design of safe spirals on the scanner
David Leitão — King's College London
Thu 14 May 16:00
Meeting Room 1.40
New Pulse Sequences and Signal Modeling Designs
605-03-006
Limbic Neurometabolic Network Segregation Underlies Cognitive Resilience in Alzheimer’s Disease
Wenli Li — Shanghai Jiao Tong University
Thu 14 May 16:00
Ballroom West
Next-Generation Neuroimaging for Alzheimer’s Disease: From Molecules to Networks
502-03-002
Comprehensive multi-modal MRI templates of the infant brain: a foundational resource for infant brain research
Ruolin Li — University of Pennsylvania
Wed 13 May 13:40
Hall 1B
Defining "Normal" in Pediatric Brain MRI
507-04-003
BioTTA: Maximizing Domain Generalization in Automatic Fetal Brain Biometry with Test-Time Adaptation
YIJIN LI — Beihang University
Wed 13 May 16:00
Meeting Room 1.40
Advanced Segmentation in MRI Across Scales and Domains
607-01-003
Deep Learning-based Estimation of Myocardial Extracellular Volume Without Blood Sampling: Multicenter Study in 9,700 Patients
Zhuoan Li — Purdue University
Thu 14 May 08:30
Meeting Room 1.40
Advanced Cardiac Quantification Methods
403-01-005
Across-scales connectivity mapping of the marmoset brain
Runjia Lin — University of Pennsylvania
Tue 12 May 08:20
Auditorium 1
Diffusion Tractography
408-04-005
MR Fingerprinting for All-In-One Parametric Mapping and Multi-Contrast Synthetic LGE in Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy
Zexuan Liu — Biomedical Engineering, University of Michigan
Tue 12 May 16:00
Meeting Room 1.60
Quantitative Imaging: MR Fingerprinting
304-02-001
High-SNR Whole-Brain Mesoscale Diffusion MRI Using Rotating-View Acquisitions (ROVER-dMRI)
Qiang Liu — Brigham and Women's Hospital and Harvard Medical School
Mon 11 May 08:20
Ballroom East
Diffusion Acquisition and Reconstruction
403-01-004
Combined MR – histology – micron-resolution fiber mapping towards multimodal microscopic validation of MRI
Andy Liu — Stanford Medicine
Tue 12 May 08:20
Auditorium 1
Diffusion Tractography
402-03-003
Pipeline for Quantifying Uncertainty for SPICE Reconstructed MRSI
Tian Lyu — Centre for Integrative Neuroimaging, FMRIB, Nuffield Department of Clinical Neurosciences, University of Oxford
Tue 12 May 13:40
Hall 1B
Metabolic Imaging and MR Spectroscopy: Methods and Application
508-02-001
Memory-Efficient Iterative Subspace Reconstructions on GPUs for Non-Cartesian MRI
Ivo Maatman — Center for Biomedical Imaging, Department of Radiology, NYU Grossman School of Medicine
Wed 13 May 08:20
Meeting Room 1.60
Novel Reconstruction Techniques for Fast Imaging
551-01-007
First-order Motion-Compensated Readouts for 3D Radial PC-bSSFP 4D Flow MRI
Jacob Malich — University and ETH Zürich
Wed 13 May 08:20
Power Pitch Theatre 1
Frontiers in Cardiovascular MR
551-01-007
First-order Motion-Compensated Readouts for 3D Radial PC-bSSFP 4D Flow MRI
Jacob Malich — University and ETH Zürich
Wed 13 May 08:20
Power Pitch Theatre 1
Frontiers in Cardiovascular MR
304-04-002
In-vivo Demonstrations of a Flexible Head Cap Enabling Multimodal and Posture Adaptable Neuroimaging
Julian Maravilla — University of California
Mon 11 May 16:10
Ballroom East
Multimodal and Innovative Design
504-03-002
Automatic and robust 3D vessel segmentation in time-of-flight magnetic resonance images
Chiara Mauri — Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School
Wed 13 May 13:40
Ballroom East
Cutting-Edge Techniques for Intracranial Artery Visualization
405-04-003
Signatures of structural disorder in axons and glial processes in human white matter using time-dependent diffusion MRS
Jessie Mosso — New York University Grossman School of Medicine
Tue 12 May 16:00
Ballroom West
From Diffusion Characteristics Toward Clinical Impact
306-02-008
Axon- and glia-specific fiber orientation distributions in human white matter probed with diffusion MR spectroscopy
Jessie Mosso — New York University Grossman School of Medicine
Mon 11 May 13:50
Auditorium 2
From Theory to Clinic: Advances in Diffusion MRI Modeling and Analysis
302-02-001
Functional lung MRI during tachypnea detects changes in regional ventilation after dual bronchodilator treatment in COPD
Robin Müller — German Center for Lung Research (DZL)
Mon 11 May 08:20
Hall 1B
Take a Breath: Chest, Thoracic, and Pulmonary MRI
608-03-005
T1 and T2 mapping of the human brain across magnetic field strengths from 0.047 T to 7.0 T
Martijn Nagtegaal — Leiden University Medical Center
Thu 14 May 16:00
Meeting Room 1.60
Quantitative Imaging: Multiparametric and Synthetic MRI
630-03-004
Arrhythmia-Resolved Heart-Brain Hemodynamic Relationships in Atrial Fibrillation: A Feasibility Study
Anahita Najafi — Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine
Thu 14 May 16:00
Meeting Room 2.60
Hemodynamics and Flow
506-01-002
Battery-Powered Portable MRI For Low-Resource Settings
Mary Nassejje — Institute for Molecular Imaging and Instrumentation (i3M), Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas & Universitat Politècnica de València
Wed 13 May 08:20
Auditorium 2
Low Field MRI Hardware
302-03-009
AI-guided autonomous fetal MRI
Sara Neves Silva — King's College London
Mon 11 May 13:50
Hall 1B
Next-Level Pediatric MRI: Technical Advances To Image Children Better
551-01-008
Characterizing Cardiac Dynamics of Arrhythmic Patients with 3D+t CMR-MOTUS and Dynamic Mode Decomposition
Thomas Olausson — University Medical Center Utrecht
Wed 13 May 08:20
Power Pitch Theatre 1
Frontiers in Cardiovascular MR
551-01-008
Characterizing Cardiac Dynamics of Arrhythmic Patients with 3D+t CMR-MOTUS and Dynamic Mode Decomposition
Thomas Olausson — University Medical Center Utrecht
Wed 13 May 08:20
Power Pitch Theatre 1
Frontiers in Cardiovascular MR
401-02-003
BrainMR Specialist: A Foundation Model of Brain MRI for Diverse Downstream Applications
Juhyung Park — Seoul National University
Tue 12 May 08:20
Hall 1A
Foundation Models
503-03-001
All-in-One DeepGrasp: A Unified Self-Supervised Model for Accelerated 4D Radial MRI Across Organs, Resolutions, and Dynamics
Haoyang Pei — Bernard and Irene Schwartz Center for Biomedical Imaging, Department of Radiology, New York University Grossman School of Medicine, New York, New York
Wed 13 May 16:00
Auditorium 1
AI: Emerging Techniques and Clinical Applications
368-03-001
FENCE: A Flexible Electric Noise Cancellation Endo-shield for EMI Reduction in Low-Field MRI
Julia Pfitzer — Graz University of Technology
Mon 11 May 13:50
Digital Posters Row I
Low Field Systems and Applications
505-04-002
Layer-fMRI at 0.39 mm isotropic meets vascular mapping at 0.35 mm isotropic: Partners or Confounders?
Alessandra Pizzuti — Maastricht University
Wed 13 May 16:00
Ballroom West
Mesoscale Functional MRI
403-02-003
Generalization of Synthetic CT from Diagnostic Spine MRI: A Multi-Center Approach
Ryan Pollitt — University Medical Center Utrecht
Tue 12 May 13:40
Auditorium 1
AI-Enabled Image Synthesis and Translation
607-03-004
Achieving Fast, High-Resolution Brain MR Elastography through Magnetization Preparation and Distributed Generalized Encoding
Nicholas Pyontek — University of Delaware
Thu 14 May 16:00
Meeting Room 1.40
New Pulse Sequences and Signal Modeling Designs
604-02-005
QQ-F: A Generalized QQ-based Deep Learning Approach for Oxygen Extraction Fraction Mapping across Diverse Acquisition Schemes
Tian Qiu — George Washington University
Thu 14 May 13:40
Ballroom East
Perfusion, Flow, and Hemodynamics Across Scales
403-02-002
Analysis of the Information Contribution of Different Contrast Scans in an MRI Examination aided by Content/style Modeling
Chinmay Rao — Leiden University Medical Center
Tue 12 May 13:40
Auditorium 1
AI-Enabled Image Synthesis and Translation
630-01-001
ANISO-QSM: An Anisotropic Nonlinear Inversion for Susceptibility-separation Optimization algorithm.
Daniel Ridani — Polytechnique Montréal
Thu 14 May 08:30
Meeting Room 2.60
Quantitative Susceptibility Mapping: From Phase to Tissue Properties
606-03-001
Antenatal Maternal Anaemia and Infant Brain Structure: High (3T) and Ultra-Low-Field (64mT) MRI Findings from South Africa
Jessica Ringshaw — University of Cape Town
Thu 14 May 16:00
Auditorium 2
Low Field MRI Applications
305-04-009
Accuracy and Sensitivity of 3D qDESS in T2-mapping of Skeletal Muscle Before and After Exercise-induced Increases in T2
Gabriel Rossetto — Newcastle University
Mon 11 May 16:10
Ballroom West
MRI of Musculoskeletal Kinematics, Biomechanics, and Exercise
504-04-006
¹H-MRS in a Mouse Model of Pancreatic Ductal Adenocarcinoma: Tentative Assignment of Seven Lipids and Twelve Metabolites
Diana G. Rotaru — Medical University of Vienna
Wed 13 May 16:00
Ballroom East
Cancer Imaging and Spectroscopy
603-03-005
Behavior Score Prediction in Resting-State Functional MRI for Alzheimer’s Disease Spectrum by Deep State Space Modeling
Javier Salazar Cavazos — University of Michigan
Thu 14 May 16:00
Auditorium 1
AI for Diagnostic and Prognostic Applications
401-03-008
A4IM: Affordable, Accessible, Adjustable and Accurate Imaging at Low Field Strength with the OSI² ONE System
David Schote — Physikalisch-Technische Bundesanstalt (PTB), Braunschweig and Berlin
Tue 12 May 13:40
Hall 1A
End-to-End Software Innovation
351-02-001
Detection of Spontaneous Muscular Contractions at Rest: A Comparison of DW-MRI to Clinically Established Methods
Martin Schwartz — University Hospital of Tuebingen
Mon 11 May 13:50
Power Pitch Theatre 1
MSK: Everything, Everywhere, and All at Once
351-02-001
Detection of Spontaneous Muscular Contractions at Rest: A Comparison of DW-MRI to Clinically Established Methods
Martin Schwartz — University Hospital of Tuebingen
Mon 11 May 13:50
Power Pitch Theatre 1
MSK: Everything, Everywhere, and All at Once
507-04-004
Open-Access Mouse Cardiac MRI Dataset and Segmentation Model: A Deep Learning Approach for Preclinical Research
Wan Shah — Centre for Translational Cardiovascular Imaging, University College London
Wed 13 May 16:00
Meeting Room 1.40
Advanced Segmentation in MRI Across Scales and Domains
304-02-002
Towards Reliable Plug-and-Play Spiral dMRI with Efficient Field Characterization and Reconstruction for Joint k-q Sampling
Zachary Shah — Stanford University
Mon 11 May 08:20
Ballroom East
Diffusion Acquisition and Reconstruction
403-01-006
Diffusion tractography maps pathways that explain direct and indirect electrophysiological connectivity
S Shailja — Stanford University
Tue 12 May 08:20
Auditorium 1
Diffusion Tractography
404-02-007
Relationships between key brain tumor metabolites in grade 2-3 astrocytoma and oligodendroglioma
Dunja Simicic — Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
Tue 12 May 08:20
Ballroom East
Altered Metabolism Across Healthy Aging and Neurological Disorders
401-04-003
Direct dynamic 2H MRSI and metabolic modelling for 3D characterization of glucose oxidative metabolism in rats brain
Alessio Siviglia — CIBM Center for Biomedical Imaging
Tue 12 May 16:00
Hall 1A
Metabolism
452-01-014
Novel lung MRI for personalised computational models of ventilation distribution in children
Megan Soo — Auckland Bioengineering Institute, University of Auckland
Tue 12 May 08:20
Power Pitch Theatre 2
Pediatric Imaging Frontiers
452-01-014
Novel lung MRI for personalised computational models of ventilation distribution in children
Megan Soo — Auckland Bioengineering Institute, University of Auckland
Tue 12 May 08:20
Power Pitch Theatre 2
Pediatric Imaging Frontiers
331-01-001
Subacute Caudate Putamen Alteration Predicts Long-term Post-Stroke Outcomes Following Intranasal Hericium erinaceus Treatment
Ying-Wei Sung — National Yang Ming Chiao Tung University
Mon 11 May 08:20
Roof Terrace
Neuro Imaging and Metabolism
331-01-001
Subacute Caudate Putamen Alteration Predicts Long-term Post-Stroke Outcomes Following Intranasal Hericium erinaceus Treatment
Ying-Wei Sung — National Yang Ming Chiao Tung University
Mon 11 May 08:20
Roof Terrace
Neuro Imaging and Metabolism
502-03-007
Infant laminal cortical myelination associated with behavior and environment
Shufang Tan — Children's Hospital of Philadelphia
Wed 13 May 13:40
Hall 1B
Defining "Normal" in Pediatric Brain MRI
406-02-001
Simultaneous assessment of cardiac-driven cerebral arterial, venous, CSF dynamics and coupling with multiband dualVENC PC-MRI
Jianing Tang — Northwestern University
Tue 12 May 13:40
Auditorium 2
The Dynamic Brain: Flow, Pressure, and Exchange
506-01-001
MCAST: Adaptive EMI Suppression via a Multi-coil Cross-Attention Spatio-Temporal Network for Unshielded Low-Field MRI
Jinglei Tang — Shanghai Jiao Tong University
Wed 13 May 08:20
Auditorium 2
Low Field MRI Hardware
652-02-013
Quantitative 3D Mapping of Cardiac-Driven CSF Dynamics Using Velocity-Encoded T2-Prepared GRASE
Jianing Tang — Northwestern University
Thu 14 May 13:40
Power Pitch Theatre 2
Heart and Brain Interactions
652-02-013
Quantitative 3D Mapping of Cardiac-Driven CSF Dynamics Using Velocity-Encoded T2-Prepared GRASE
Jianing Tang — Northwestern University
Thu 14 May 13:40
Power Pitch Theatre 2
Heart and Brain Interactions
305-03-004
Integrated local B0-B1 array: a portable acceleration platform with nonlinear gradient waves numerically optimized in k-space
Rui Tian — Max Planck Institute for Biological Cybernetics
Mon 11 May 13:50
Ballroom West
Hybrid and Novel Systems
462-06-002
Multi-Vendor Compatible Rx-only Quadrature Wireless Coil for MR-mammography at 1.5T
Pavel Tikhonov — ITMO University
Tue 12 May 16:55
Digital Posters Row C
Breast MRI: Technical Developments
503-02-002
Fat-removal Reconstruction for Improved Body DWI Fat Suppression
Aidan Tollefson — University of Wisconsin - Madison
Wed 13 May 13:40
Auditorium 1
Body Diffusion MRI
430-04-001
Lipomatous Metaplasia in Hemorrhagic and Nonhemorrhagic Myocardial Infarctions: A PET/MRI Study with Histological Validation
Joao Pedro Torres Neiva Rodrigues — Cedars-Sinai Medical Center
Tue 12 May 16:00
Meeting Room 2.60
Cardiovascular and Body Imaging
603-03-007
Context is everything: Reducing false positives in longitudinal health assessment using deep learning with prior information
Lavanya Umapathy — Center for Advanced Imaging Innovation and Research (CAI²R), New York University Grossman School of Medicine
Thu 14 May 16:00
Auditorium 1
AI for Diagnostic and Prognostic Applications
408-04-003
Fully 3D Unrolled Magnetic Resonance Fingerprinting Reconstruction via Staged Pretraining and Implicit Gridding
Yonatan Urman — Stanford University
Tue 12 May 16:00
Meeting Room 1.60
Quantitative Imaging: MR Fingerprinting
504-02-002
Lifespan Normative Modeling of Diffusion MRI in 54,583 Participants and Deployment on Local Data
Julio Villalon Reina — Keck School of Medicine, University of Southern California
Wed 13 May 08:20
Ballroom East
Probing Brain Microstructure with Water: Applications
469-01-014
MRI in Clinical Practice: Diagnosis & Management Insights from ultra-Low-Field Brain MRI in a Low-Resource Hospital in Malawi
Maclean Vokhiwa — Kamuzu University of Health Sciences
Tue 12 May 08:20
Digital Posters Row J
MRI in Africa: Advancing Neuroimaging Research, Capacity, and Equity in African Populations
301-04-004
Investigation of Dipolar Order Relaxation Times (T1D) and ihMT in Lipid Model Membranes
Niklas Wallstein — Aix Marseille Univ
Mon 11 May 16:10
Hall 1A
Innovations in Contrast Mechanisms for MRI
303-03-001
Gadolinium-free MRI using artificial intelligence in glioma: a clinically-oriented benchmark study
Ivar Wamelink — Amsterdam University Medical Center, University of Amsterdam
Mon 11 May 16:10
Auditorium 1
Advanced Tumor Imaging: Bridging Research and Clinical Practice
431-01-015
Amsterdam Imaging and Clinical Glioma Database; IMAGO release 1.0
Ivar Wamelink — Amsterdam University Medical Center, University of Amsterdam
Tue 12 May 08:20
Roof Terrace
From Microstructure to Metabolism: Next-Generation MRI for Brain Tumors
431-01-015
Amsterdam Imaging and Clinical Glioma Database; IMAGO release 1.0
Ivar Wamelink — Amsterdam University Medical Center, University of Amsterdam
Tue 12 May 08:20
Roof Terrace
From Microstructure to Metabolism: Next-Generation MRI for Brain Tumors
430-04-008
From Imaging to Mechanisms: MRI-Based Insights into Diabetic Gastroparesis in Rats
Xiaokai Wang — University of Michigan
Tue 12 May 16:00
Meeting Room 2.60
Cardiovascular and Body Imaging
402-03-004
Deep Learning-Based Artifact Removal for Enhanced Metabolite Quantification of In Vivo 7T MRSI
Tianyu Wang — University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center
Tue 12 May 13:40
Hall 1B
Metabolic Imaging and MR Spectroscopy: Methods and Application
601-03-007
Whole-brain GABA and Glx mapping using SLOW and joint LTSA reconstruction at 3T
Guodong Weng — Inselspital, University of Bern
Thu 14 May 16:00
Hall 1A
Spectroscopy and Spectroscopic Imaging
406-02-004
Distinct pressure- and flow-driven propagation pathways of low-frequency oscillations in the human brain
Adam Wright — Purdue University
Tue 12 May 13:40
Auditorium 2
The Dynamic Brain: Flow, Pressure, and Exchange
508-02-002
Advancing EPTI by rapid sequence prototyping, adaptive field correction, and scalable cloud-powered real-time reconstruction
Jian Wu — Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School
Wed 13 May 08:20
Meeting Room 1.60
Novel Reconstruction Techniques for Fast Imaging
304-03-003
Integrative MRI-Transcriptomics Reveal a Distinct Morphomolecular Identity of Brain Metastases Divergent from Gliomas
Neha Yadav — Indian Institute of Science Education and Research (IISER) Berhampur
Mon 11 May 13:50
Ballroom East
Precision MRI: Advanced Quantitative Imaging and Biomarkers for Brain Tumors
607-01-010
Deep Learning Assessment of Global Radial and Circumferential Strain in Single Ventricle Patients
Tina Yao — University College London
Thu 14 May 08:30
Meeting Room 1.40
Advanced Cardiac Quantification Methods
403-01-001
From Fixels to Tracts: Overcoming Limitations of Fixel-Based Inference with STRIFE
Simone Zanoni — The University of Sydney
Tue 12 May 08:20
Auditorium 1
Diffusion Tractography
406-02-006
Distinct Hydrodynamic and Hemodynamic Drivers in the Brain Parenchyma Revealed by Multi-modal Dynamic MRI
Jianing Zhang — Indiana University School of Medicine
Tue 12 May 13:40
Auditorium 2
The Dynamic Brain: Flow, Pressure, and Exchange
602-02-001
Short TE From a Nonlinear Gradient Coil Improves Image Quality and Lesion Conspicuity of Prostate DWI
Horace Zhang — Yale University
Thu 14 May 13:40
Hall 1B
Prostate MRI: Methodological Developments
505-02-004
Shared and specific structural covariance network disruptions in adolescent and adult major depressive disorder
Qian Zhang — Huaxi MR Research Center (HMRRC), Institute of Radiology, Functional and Molecular Imaging Key Laboratory of Sichuan Province, West China Hospital of Sichuan University, Chengdu
Wed 13 May 08:20
Ballroom West
Insights into Psychiatric Disorders and the Human Connectome
604-02-003
KIVA: Water Exchange Rate (kw) Imaging with Velocity-selective Arterial Spin Labeling
Chenyang Zhao — University of Southern California
Thu 14 May 13:40
Ballroom East
Perfusion, Flow, and Hemodynamics Across Scales
606-02-004
Treatment response assessment in patients with pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma using hyperpolarized 13C metabolic MRI
Minjie Zhu — University Of California, San Francisco (UCSF)
Thu 14 May 13:40
Auditorium 2
Beyond Protons: Advances in Multinuclear and Hyperpolarized MRI
Magna Cum Laude
185
305-03-007
High Performance Anatomy Tailored Gradient Inserts for Rapid MRI
Daniel Abraham — Stanford University
Mon 11 May 13:50
Ballroom West
Hybrid and Novel Systems
368-01-005
Motion Compensation in Dynamic Free Breathing Pulmonary UTE MRI Reconstruction for Neonatal Subjects with Bulk Motion
Sabbir Ahmed — University of Iowa
Mon 11 May 08:20
Digital Posters Row I
Registration, Atlases, and Motion
506-01-005
External Passive Shimming of a 135 mT Halbach Magnet for a Bedside NICU MRI Scanner; A Flexible, Space-Saving Approach
Sarah Altman — Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Wed 13 May 08:20
Auditorium 2
Low Field MRI Hardware
531-02-014
Investigating Cerebral Blood Flow Changes in Alzheimer's Patients Undergoing Anti-Amyloid Therapy
Elena Andree — University of Oxford
Wed 13 May 13:40
Roof Terrace
Imaging Neurodegeneration in Motion: Multimodal Biomarkers for Alzheimer’s Disease and Parkinson’s Disease
531-02-014
Investigating Cerebral Blood Flow Changes in Alzheimer's Patients Undergoing Anti-Amyloid Therapy
Elena Andree — University of Oxford
Wed 13 May 13:40
Roof Terrace
Imaging Neurodegeneration in Motion: Multimodal Biomarkers for Alzheimer’s Disease and Parkinson’s Disease
503-03-005
PSIRNet: Deep Learning–Based Free-Breathing Rapid-Acquisition Late Enhancement Imaging
Arda Atalik — Microsoft Research
Wed 13 May 16:00
Auditorium 1
AI: Emerging Techniques and Clinical Applications
531-03-003
Reducing scan time for myelin bilayer mapping by 38% through optimised SAR management
Emily Louise Baadsvik — ETH Zurich and University of Zurich
Wed 13 May 16:00
Roof Terrace
Exploring Brain Microstructure Across White Matter, Gray Matter, and in TBI
531-03-003
Reducing scan time for myelin bilayer mapping by 38% through optimised SAR management
Emily Louise Baadsvik — ETH Zurich and University of Zurich
Wed 13 May 16:00
Roof Terrace
Exploring Brain Microstructure Across White Matter, Gray Matter, and in TBI
601-03-001
MR Spectroscopy without Water Suppression using the Gradient Impulse Response Function
James Bacon — Centre for Integrative Neuroimaging, FMRIB, Nuffield Department of Clinical Neurosciences, University of Oxford
Thu 14 May 16:00
Hall 1A
Spectroscopy and Spectroscopic Imaging
503-02-008
Neural Controlled Differential Equation (NCDE) for IVIM Analysis in Flow Phantom and Multisite Breast Tumor Patients
Dibash Basukala — Center for Advanced Imaging Innovation and Research (CAI²R), New York University Grossman School of Medicine
Wed 13 May 13:40
Auditorium 1
Body Diffusion MRI
607-01-002
Deep-Learning Based Highly Sub-Sampled 2-Point Velocity Encoding 4D flow MRI
Haben Berhane — Biomedical Engineering, Northwestern University, Chicago
Thu 14 May 08:30
Meeting Room 1.40
Advanced Cardiac Quantification Methods
551-01-010
TOF2FLOW – Generation of 4D Flow MRI angiography from Time-of-Flight MR angiography
Tamara Bianchessi — Linköping University
Wed 13 May 08:20
Power Pitch Theatre 1
Frontiers in Cardiovascular MR
551-01-010
TOF2FLOW – Generation of 4D Flow MRI angiography from Time-of-Flight MR angiography
Tamara Bianchessi — Linköping University
Wed 13 May 08:20
Power Pitch Theatre 1
Frontiers in Cardiovascular MR
605-02-006
Phase-Pole-Free Images and Smooth Coil Sensitivity Maps by Regularized Nonlinear Inversion
Moritz Blumenthal — Graz University of Technology
Thu 14 May 13:40
Ballroom West
Artifacts and Correction Strategies
606-01-008
FastGRAPE for 3D non-selective pulse design at 11.7 T
Joseph Brégeat — CEA NeuroSpin, Paris-Saclay University, CNRS, Gif-Sur-Yvette
Thu 14 May 08:30
Auditorium 2
Ultra-High Field Applications
406-01-004
Intensity encoding of sensory stimulation in the spinal cord with fMRI
Sandrine Bédard — Polytechnique Montréal
Tue 12 May 08:20
Auditorium 2
fMRI: Acquisition and Preprocessing
507-03-007
Spatial-Frequency Feature Learning for Fast Amide Contrast Mapping from Sparse CEST Offsets
PEI CAI — The University of Hong Kong
Wed 13 May 13:40
Meeting Room 1.40
New Frontiers in CEST MRI
531-01-009
Voxel-Wise DCE-MRI for Fibrosis Assessment in Chronic Liver Disease: A Data-Driven Framework Validated Against Histology
Shan Cai — Linköping University
Wed 13 May 08:20
Roof Terrace
Quantitative Imaging: Applications
531-01-009
Voxel-Wise DCE-MRI for Fibrosis Assessment in Chronic Liver Disease: A Data-Driven Framework Validated Against Histology
Shan Cai — Linköping University
Wed 13 May 08:20
Roof Terrace
Quantitative Imaging: Applications
403-01-009
Toward patient-specific prediction of recurrence directions in glioblastoma: a tractography-based Index of Tumor Invasiveness
Elena Cantoni — IRCCS Istituto delle Scienze Neurologiche di Bologna
Tue 12 May 08:20
Auditorium 1
Diffusion Tractography
352-02-001
Automated assessment of internal capsule maturation in neonatal 3D-reconstructed structural T2-weighted MRI at 7T
Chiara Casella — King's College London
Mon 11 May 13:50
Power Pitch Theatre 2
Segmentation: Automated, Scalable, and Clinically Oriented MRI Analysis
352-02-001
Automated assessment of internal capsule maturation in neonatal 3D-reconstructed structural T2-weighted MRI at 7T
Chiara Casella — King's College London
Mon 11 May 13:50
Power Pitch Theatre 2
Segmentation: Automated, Scalable, and Clinically Oriented MRI Analysis
501-04-009
The Role of Water-Specific T1 Mapping in Reflecting Hepatic Tissue Composition: Comparison with MRE, PDFF, and R2*
Jingjia Chen — New York University Grossman School of Medicine
Wed 13 May 16:00
Hall 1A
Applications of Quantitative MRI in the Body
331-01-003
Circuit-Specific Motor Restoration by BurstDR Subthalamic Nucleus Deep Brain Stimulation in a Parkinson’s Disease Mouse Model
Ting-Chieh Chen — National Yang Ming Chiao Tung University
Mon 11 May 08:20
Roof Terrace
Neuro Imaging and Metabolism
331-01-003
Circuit-Specific Motor Restoration by BurstDR Subthalamic Nucleus Deep Brain Stimulation in a Parkinson’s Disease Mouse Model
Ting-Chieh Chen — National Yang Ming Chiao Tung University
Mon 11 May 08:20
Roof Terrace
Neuro Imaging and Metabolism
430-02-001
Spiral-mpDYCI for high-resolution multi-parametric dynamic contrast imaging
Yang Chen — University of Southern California
Tue 12 May 08:20
Meeting Room 2.60
Novel Acquisition Strategies and Open-Source Sequences
531-01-001
MRI in Clinical Practice: Integrating ASL Perfusion and MRE Stiffness for Innovative Functional–Structural Assessment of CKD
Yueyao Chen — Shenzhen Traditional Chinese Medicine Hospital, The Fourth Clinical Medical College of Guangzhou University of Chinese Medicine
Wed 13 May 08:20
Roof Terrace
Quantitative Imaging: Applications
531-01-001
MRI in Clinical Practice: Integrating ASL Perfusion and MRE Stiffness for Innovative Functional–Structural Assessment of CKD
Yueyao Chen — Shenzhen Traditional Chinese Medicine Hospital, The Fourth Clinical Medical College of Guangzhou University of Chinese Medicine
Wed 13 May 08:20
Roof Terrace
Quantitative Imaging: Applications
366-05-002
3D T1/T2 mapping of prostate using DESPO+: a clinical feasibility study for prostate cancer assesment at 3T
Ronal Coronado — Millennium Institute for Intelligent Healthcare Engineering - iHEALTH
Mon 11 May 16:10
Digital Posters Row G
Quantitative Applications in Body MRI: Make the Numbers Count
403-01-010
Detection of white matter degeneration of the visual pathway via diffusion-weighted MRI
Daniela Coutiño — Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico
Tue 12 May 08:20
Auditorium 1
Diffusion Tractography
530-03-003
Characterizing the Spatiotemporal Thermal Effects of Pulsed Microwave Ablation with Computational Modeling and MR Thermometry
Qing Dai — Samueli School of Engineering, University of California Los Angeles, Los Angeles
Wed 13 May 13:40
Meeting Room 2.60
Interventional MRI: Tracking, Temperature Mapping, and Image-Guided Therapy
302-03-002
Fetal Cardiac MRI to Improve the Diagnosis of Congenital Heart Disease: the FUTURE 2.0 study
Roos de Lange — University Medical Center Utrecht
Mon 11 May 13:50
Hall 1B
Next-Level Pediatric MRI: Technical Advances To Image Children Better
566-05-002
Deep Learning Accelerated Slice Encoding for Metal Artifact Correction (SEMAC) for Hip Arthroplasty MRI
Jeanette Deck — University of Zurich
Wed 13 May 16:00
Digital Posters Row G
MSK: Clinical and Cutting-Edge
503-02-010
Cardiac diffusion tensor imaging at 0.6T using second-order motion-compensated single- and multi-shot EPI
Yiming Dong — C.J. Gorter MRI Center, Leiden University Medical Center
Wed 13 May 13:40
Auditorium 1
Body Diffusion MRI
607-03-001
Mesoscopic Diffusion-Weighted Imaging via Multi-Shot Spirals on a High-Performance Gradient System
Paul Dubovan — Harvard Medical School
Thu 14 May 16:00
Meeting Room 1.40
New Pulse Sequences and Signal Modeling Designs
409-03-009
Real-World Validation of Automated 3D-MRF Classification for Alzheimer's Diagnosis
Andrew Dupuis — Case Western Reserve University
Tue 12 May 13:40
Meeting Room 2.40
Quantitative Imaging: Applications
501-04-002
Reproducibility of renal PCASL sequences at 3.0 T: preliminary results from a multicenter and multivendor study
Rebeca Echeverria-Chasco — Clinica Universidad de Navarra
Wed 13 May 16:00
Hall 1A
Applications of Quantitative MRI in the Body
603-01-004
Cerebral “dirty-appearing” white matter is not linked to cognitive decline and dementia risk in older adults
Ingmar Eiling — Leiden University Medical Center
Thu 14 May 08:30
Auditorium 1
Dementia Not Related to Alzheimer's Disease
608-03-002
High-resolution highly accelerated free breathing 3D joint T1/T2 and PDFF/T2* mapping of the liver at 0.55T
Felipe Ercoli — Millennium Institute for Intelligent Healthcare Engineering - iHEALTH
Thu 14 May 16:00
Meeting Room 1.60
Quantitative Imaging: Multiparametric and Synthetic MRI
505-03-006
Altered Thalamic Soma and Neurite Microstructure in Migraine with Aura on High-Gradient Diffusion MRI
Laleh Eskandarian — Athinoula A. Martinos Center for Biomedical Imaging, Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School
Wed 13 May 13:40
Ballroom West
Teasing Out the Microstructure of the Brain and Nervous System
331-02-014
Zero-Shot Physics-Informed Neural Networks for Robust Multi-Vendor DSC-MRI Perfusion Quantification in Glioblastoma Patients
Ziyu Fu — MD Anderson Cancer Center
Mon 11 May 13:50
Roof Terrace
AI Frontiers in Image Analysis
331-02-014
Zero-Shot Physics-Informed Neural Networks for Robust Multi-Vendor DSC-MRI Perfusion Quantification in Glioblastoma Patients
Ziyu Fu — MD Anderson Cancer Center
Mon 11 May 13:50
Roof Terrace
AI Frontiers in Image Analysis
352-03-001
Lessons from subjects with markedly dilated perivascular spaces: no cortical PVS and limited presence around medullary veins
Nina Fultz — Leiden University Medical Center
Mon 11 May 16:10
Power Pitch Theatre 2
Neurofluid Dynamics in Sleep and Disease
352-03-001
Lessons from subjects with markedly dilated perivascular spaces: no cortical PVS and limited presence around medullary veins
Nina Fultz — Leiden University Medical Center
Mon 11 May 16:10
Power Pitch Theatre 2
Neurofluid Dynamics in Sleep and Disease
631-01-011
Exploiting the microwave regime with transmission lines: High-impedance dipoles and Marchand baluns for 11.7T brain MRI
Paul-François Gapais — University of Paris-Saclay, CEA, CNRS, BAOBAB, NeuroSpin
Thu 14 May 08:30
Roof Terrace
RF Coils
631-01-011
Exploiting the microwave regime with transmission lines: High-impedance dipoles and Marchand baluns for 11.7T brain MRI
Paul-François Gapais — University of Paris-Saclay, CEA, CNRS, BAOBAB, NeuroSpin
Thu 14 May 08:30
Roof Terrace
RF Coils
652-01-013
Predicting Aggressive Cribriform Prostate Cancer Using Pre-operative Multiparametric MRI
Nader Gharbia — Faculty of medicine of Sfax
Thu 14 May 08:30
Power Pitch Theatre 2
Prognostication and Predictive Value of MR Biomarkers
652-01-013
Predicting Aggressive Cribriform Prostate Cancer Using Pre-operative Multiparametric MRI
Nader Gharbia — Faculty of medicine of Sfax
Thu 14 May 08:30
Power Pitch Theatre 2
Prognostication and Predictive Value of MR Biomarkers
503-03-006
Towards real-time self-gating for fetal cardiac MRI via deep learning-based motion estimation in k-space
Aya Ghoul — Medical Image and Data Analysis (MIDAS.lab), Department of Diagnostic and Interventional Radiology
Wed 13 May 16:00
Auditorium 1
AI: Emerging Techniques and Clinical Applications
430-03-007
A Trainable Uncertainty Module for Image Reconstruction Methods using Conformal Prediction
Ilias Giannakopoulos — NYU Grossman School of Medicine
Tue 12 May 13:40
Meeting Room 2.60
Advanced Image Reconstruction
404-03-005
Multiple Inversion Recovery GRE as a novel imaging marker for myelin state and axonal damage in MS lesions
Dimitrios Gkotsoulias — Translational Imaging in Neurology (ThINk) Basel, Department of Biomedical Engineering, Faculty of Medicine, University Hospital Basel and University of Basel
Tue 12 May 13:40
Ballroom East
Multiscale MRI in Neuroinflammation
601-02-003
Age- and Sex-Dependent Alterations in Skeletal Muscle Microstructure Assessed by DTI and DKI
Ananya Goyal — Stanford University
Thu 14 May 13:40
Hall 1A
Muscle MRI in Health and Disease: From Standardization to Application
402-02-008
pH imaging using hyperpolarized [1,5-13C2]Z-OMPD in kidneys of pig models at 3 T
Martin Grashei — Technical University of Munich (TUM)
Tue 12 May 08:20
Hall 1B
Inside the Bean: Advances in Renal MRI
409-03-002
OpenMRF: A Modular, Vendor-Neutral Open-Source Framework for Reproducible Magnetic Resonance Fingerprinting using Pulseq
Tom Griesler — University of Michigan
Tue 12 May 13:40
Meeting Room 2.40
Quantitative Imaging: Applications
401-03-003
In vivo imaging with a low-cost MRI scanner and cloud data processing in low-resource settings.
Teresa Guallart Naval — Institute for Molecular Imaging and Instrumentation (i3M), Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas & Universitat Politècnica de València
Tue 12 May 13:40
Hall 1A
End-to-End Software Innovation
605-02-008
Myocardial wideband T2 mapping using gradient echo readout and advanced denoising for patients with implantable cardiac devic
Pauline Gut — Lausanne University Hospital (CHUV) and University of Lausanne (UNIL)
Thu 14 May 13:40
Ballroom West
Artifacts and Correction Strategies
501-03-005
Modeling of large-vessel BOLD contributions in Echo-Planar Time-resolved Imaging (EPTI) using subject-specific MR angiography
Daniel Haenelt — Athinoula A. Martinos Center for Biomedical Imaging, Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School
Wed 13 May 13:40
Hall 1A
fMRI: Advanced Analysis
503-02-005
Eddy Current Compensated Diffusion-Encoded Preparation Module for Cardiac Diffusion Tensor Imaging
Sandra Haltmeier — University Zurich and ETH Zurich
Wed 13 May 13:40
Auditorium 1
Body Diffusion MRI
331-01-005
Impact of radiotherapy on brain growth and neurometabolites in a juvenile rodent model
Shannon Helsper — KU Leuven
Mon 11 May 08:20
Roof Terrace
Neuro Imaging and Metabolism
331-01-005
Impact of radiotherapy on brain growth and neurometabolites in a juvenile rodent model
Shannon Helsper — KU Leuven
Mon 11 May 08:20
Roof Terrace
Neuro Imaging and Metabolism
503-01-005
Investigating perfusion deficits in carotid artery stenosis: single- vs. multi-delay Arterial Spin Labeling MRI
Gabriel Hoffmann — Technical University of Munich
Wed 13 May 08:20
Auditorium 1
Innovative Methods To Understand Stroke
631-03-001
An Open-Source Multi-Slice (DWI) SPEN-SE-EPI Sequence in Pulseq for Robust and Vendor-Agnostic Fast MRI
Andreas Holl — University Medical Center Freiburg, Faculty of Medicine, University of Freiburg
Thu 14 May 16:00
Roof Terrace
Diffusion Acquisition and Reconstruction
631-03-001
An Open-Source Multi-Slice (DWI) SPEN-SE-EPI Sequence in Pulseq for Robust and Vendor-Agnostic Fast MRI
Andreas Holl — University Medical Center Freiburg, Faculty of Medicine, University of Freiburg
Thu 14 May 16:00
Roof Terrace
Diffusion Acquisition and Reconstruction
605-02-005
Multi-Echo SSFP: A Method for Synthetic bSSFP MRI Contrast without Banding Artifacts at High Field
Haotian Hong — ShanghaiTech University
Thu 14 May 13:40
Ballroom West
Artifacts and Correction Strategies
531-01-003
From Ellipse to Projection Matrix: Perspective Geometry for Quantitative bSSFP Modeling
Haotian Hong — ShanghaiTech University
Wed 13 May 08:20
Roof Terrace
Quantitative Imaging: Applications
531-01-003
From Ellipse to Projection Matrix: Perspective Geometry for Quantitative bSSFP Modeling
Haotian Hong — ShanghaiTech University
Wed 13 May 08:20
Roof Terrace
Quantitative Imaging: Applications
604-02-006
CSF or tissue: which one is the most important to suppress as background signal in ASL?
Zhiyi Hu — Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
Thu 14 May 13:40
Ballroom East
Perfusion, Flow, and Hemodynamics Across Scales
502-03-001
A White Matter Tract Atlas of Geometric and Microstructural Growth from Birth to Five Years
Khoi Huynh — University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Wed 13 May 13:40
Hall 1B
Defining "Normal" in Pediatric Brain MRI
408-04-008
Fast, reliable, and high-quality χ-separation via EPTI and MRF
Hwihun Jeong — Brigham and Women's Hospital and Harvard Medical School
Tue 12 May 16:00
Meeting Room 1.60
Quantitative Imaging: MR Fingerprinting
430-03-004
Water Content Guided Physics-Informed Neural Networks for Enhanced Magnetic Resonance Electrical Properties Tomography
Yaqing Jia — School of Biomedical Engineering, Anhui Medical University
Tue 12 May 13:40
Meeting Room 2.60
Advanced Image Reconstruction
368-06-002
Temporal and Cross-Axis Interactions in Multifrequency Gradient-Induced Peripheral Nerve Stimulation (PNS)
Tianhao Jiang — ShanghaiTech University
Mon 11 May 17:05
Digital Posters Row I
Novel Gradients
630-01-004
Finite-difference based MR Electrical Properties Reconstruction Optimization Method at 3T
Kyu-Jin Jung — University of California
Thu 14 May 08:30
Meeting Room 2.60
Quantitative Susceptibility Mapping: From Phase to Tissue Properties
404-02-003
Functional 7T MRS Reveals Age-Related Metabolic Dynamics during Processing Speed
Antonia Kaiser — CIBM Center for Biomedical Imaging, École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL)
Tue 12 May 08:20
Ballroom East
Altered Metabolism Across Healthy Aging and Neurological Disorders
631-01-015
Comparative analysis of bore-tube integrated 7T body pTx coils: transmit efficiency, SAR, and load robustness
Ehsan Kazemivalipour — Athinoula A. Martinos Center for Biomedical Imaging, Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School
Thu 14 May 08:30
Roof Terrace
RF Coils
631-01-015
Comparative analysis of bore-tube integrated 7T body pTx coils: transmit efficiency, SAR, and load robustness
Ehsan Kazemivalipour — Athinoula A. Martinos Center for Biomedical Imaging, Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School
Thu 14 May 08:30
Roof Terrace
RF Coils
507-03-009
Towards Reliable CEST Imaging of the Breast: Evaluation of Fat Correction Strategies at 3T
Neele Kempa — German Cancer Research Center (DKFZ)
Wed 13 May 13:40
Meeting Room 1.40
New Frontiers in CEST MRI
452-01-005
Differentiation of Diffuse Midline Glioma from other HGGs using Quantitative Perfusion Parameters and Machine Learning
Anshika Kesari — Indian Institute of Technology, Delhi
Tue 12 May 08:20
Power Pitch Theatre 2
Pediatric Imaging Frontiers
452-01-005
Differentiation of Diffuse Midline Glioma from other HGGs using Quantitative Perfusion Parameters and Machine Learning
Anshika Kesari — Indian Institute of Technology, Delhi
Tue 12 May 08:20
Power Pitch Theatre 2
Pediatric Imaging Frontiers
630-01-008
Refining relaxometric constant in susceptibility source separation
Taechang Kim — Seoul National University
Thu 14 May 08:30
Meeting Room 2.60
Quantitative Susceptibility Mapping: From Phase to Tissue Properties
301-04-002
Simultaneous reconstruction of longitudinal QSM data (Longitudinal-QSM)
Jiye Kim — Seoul National University
Mon 11 May 16:10
Hall 1A
Innovations in Contrast Mechanisms for MRI
452-02-002
Using Spatiotemporal High-Resolution fMRI at 9.4 T to Investigate Sub Second Lagged Sequential Brain Activity
Nikolas Klein — Max Planck Institute for Biological Cybernetics
Tue 12 May 13:40
Power Pitch Theatre 2
Methodology: Acquisition and Analysis
452-02-002
Using Spatiotemporal High-Resolution fMRI at 9.4 T to Investigate Sub Second Lagged Sequential Brain Activity
Nikolas Klein — Max Planck Institute for Biological Cybernetics
Tue 12 May 13:40
Power Pitch Theatre 2
Methodology: Acquisition and Analysis
608-01-009
Abbreviated Cardiovascular MR (aCMR) for Efficient and Comprehensive Etiology Diagnosis of Acute Ischemic Stroke
Qingle Kong — University of Southern California
Thu 14 May 08:30
Meeting Room 1.60
Vessel Wall Imaging
403-02-005
Contrast Synthesis Network Guided by Scan Parameters
Jaehyeon Koo — Seoul National University
Tue 12 May 13:40
Auditorium 1
AI-Enabled Image Synthesis and Translation
452-01-009
Seeing beyond words: task-dependent causal alterations of the visuo-attentional network revealed in developmental dyslexia
Gökçe KORKMAZ — University of Pavia
Tue 12 May 08:20
Power Pitch Theatre 2
Pediatric Imaging Frontiers
452-01-009
Seeing beyond words: task-dependent causal alterations of the visuo-attentional network revealed in developmental dyslexia
Gökçe KORKMAZ — University of Pavia
Tue 12 May 08:20
Power Pitch Theatre 2
Pediatric Imaging Frontiers
404-03-003
Early Diffusion Tensor Abnormalities and Myelin Water Imaging in Radiologically Isolated Syndrome
Elena Kovacevic — University of British Columbia
Tue 12 May 13:40
Ballroom East
Multiscale MRI in Neuroinflammation
303-01-003
Patch2Voxel: Denoising perfusion MRI with Self-Supervised Learning
Puneet Kumar — The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center
Mon 11 May 08:20
Auditorium 1
AI Methods Beyond Reconstruction
530-03-004
Low-latency real-time 3D MRI for guiding cardiovascular interventions
Prakash Kumar — University of Southern California
Wed 13 May 13:40
Meeting Room 2.60
Interventional MRI: Tracking, Temperature Mapping, and Image-Guided Therapy
504-02-003
Altered Developmental Trajectories and Behavioral Correlates After Repetitive Mild Traumatic Brain Injury in Adolescent Rats
Pin-Hui Kuo — National Yang Ming Chiao Tung University
Wed 13 May 08:20
Ballroom East
Probing Brain Microstructure with Water: Applications
407-04-006
Semiquantitative MRI scores and CNR correlate with bone quality (histology and micro-CT) after osteochondral implantation
Felix Merlin König — Medical University of Vienna
Tue 12 May 16:00
Meeting Room 1.40
New Outcome Measures for Studying the Joint
301-04-006
Myelin Water Fraction mapping from T1 relaxometry for multisite datasets harmonization
Marta Lancione — IRCCS Fondazione Stella Maris
Mon 11 May 16:10
Hall 1A
Innovations in Contrast Mechanisms for MRI
607-01-005
Non-invasive Imaging of relative pressure - comparison of approaches by joint velocity and acceleration encoded 4D-Flow MRI
Vincent Lechner — Karolinska Institutet
Thu 14 May 08:30
Meeting Room 1.40
Advanced Cardiac Quantification Methods
403-02-004
Synthesising Quantitative Susceptibility Maps from Multi-Parametric Maps (MPM2QSM)
Mitchel Lee — University College London
Tue 12 May 13:40
Auditorium 1
AI-Enabled Image Synthesis and Translation
403-01-003
Directional derivatives for neuromodulation targeting: revealing topographic features in connectivity-sensitive regions
Simona Leserri — University of Eastern Finland, Kuopio
Tue 12 May 08:20
Auditorium 1
Diffusion Tractography
504-03-006
From 3D TOF to 4D ASL: A Fast Simulation-Driven Few-Shot Deep Learning Approach for Accelerated ASL Angiography
Hao Li — University of Oxford
Wed 13 May 13:40
Ballroom East
Cutting-Edge Techniques for Intracranial Artery Visualization
305-03-003
A Positively-Coupled Metamaterial for Enhanced Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Bingbai Li — Tsinghua University
Mon 11 May 13:50
Ballroom West
Hybrid and Novel Systems
607-03-002
General Flexible Fully Self-gated Phase-contrast MRI with Independent Projection Acquisition (IPA)
Wenjian Liu — ShanghaiTech University
Thu 14 May 16:00
Meeting Room 1.40
New Pulse Sequences and Signal Modeling Designs
402-02-002
Multi-b-value Diffusion, T1, R2*, and ASL MRI Classify Renal Allograft Pathology and Allograft Outcome: Interim Results
Mira Liu — Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai
Tue 12 May 08:20
Hall 1B
Inside the Bean: Advances in Renal MRI
505-02-006
Altered functional connectivity and related behavioral–cognitive pattern in children with depressive genetic risk and symptom
Fenghua Long — Huaxi MR Research Center (HMRRC), Institution of Radiology and Medical Imaging, West China Hospital of Sichuan University, Chengdu 610041, Sichuan Province, P.R. China.
Wed 13 May 08:20
Ballroom West
Insights into Psychiatric Disorders and the Human Connectome
505-03-004
3D multiscale characterization of qMRI Parameters in resected human hippocampal tissue using X-ray Phase-Contrast Tomography
Nina Luethi — University of Luebeck
Wed 13 May 13:40
Ballroom West
Teasing Out the Microstructure of the Brain and Nervous System
631-01-003
Quantification of Modeling Uncertainty for 7T Multi-Channel Transmit Arrays through Simulation–Measurement B1 Matching
Ettore Flavio Meliado — Tesla Dynamic Coils BV
Thu 14 May 08:30
Roof Terrace
RF Coils
631-01-003
Quantification of Modeling Uncertainty for 7T Multi-Channel Transmit Arrays through Simulation–Measurement B1 Matching
Ettore Flavio Meliado — Tesla Dynamic Coils BV
Thu 14 May 08:30
Roof Terrace
RF Coils
505-02-001
Identifying network states linked to the therapeutic efficacy of deep brain stimulation for OCD
David Mikhael — University Of California, San Francisco (UCSF)
Wed 13 May 08:20
Ballroom West
Insights into Psychiatric Disorders and the Human Connectome
301-03-009
Metabolomic and cell viability of live rat 3D-brain organoids in an in-house-designed bioreactor for MRS and MRI at 9.4 T
Eloise Mougel — CIBM Center for Biomedical Imaging
Mon 11 May 13:50
Hall 1A
Neuroimaging and Spectroscopy in Experimental Models
504-04-008
Effects of brain irradiation on cerebral blood flow, BBB water exchange, vascular integrity, and recognition memory in mice
Annet Nakkazi — University of Manchester
Wed 13 May 16:00
Ballroom East
Cancer Imaging and Spectroscopy
605-01-003
Motion and B0-correction Reconstruction for MP2RAGE Neonatal Imaging at 7T
Zihan Ning — King's College London
Thu 14 May 08:30
Ballroom West
Motion Correction Across the Lifespan
460-02-015
Quantitative 7T Deuterium Metabolic Imaging for Assessing Glucose Metabolism in Alzheimer’s Disease
Masha Novoselova — University of Cambridge
Tue 12 May 09:15
Digital Posters Row A
From Bench to Bedside: All About the Brain in Health and Alzheimer’s Disease
305-04-001
Volumetric Speech MRI at 60 Hz by a 90 Seconds MR -MOTUS Protocol for Assessment of Post-Surgical Velopharyngeal Dynamics
Thomas Olausson — University Medical Center Utrecht
Mon 11 May 16:10
Ballroom West
MRI of Musculoskeletal Kinematics, Biomechanics, and Exercise
605-01-005
Enabling Motion Correction for Ultra-High Field Submillimeter MP(2)RAGE and Quantitative T1 Mapping with SAMER
Jocelyn Philippe — Siemens Healthineers International AG
Thu 14 May 08:30
Ballroom West
Motion Correction Across the Lifespan
503-02-004
Correlation of diffusion anisotropy measurements from phase-contrast micro-CT and DTI in prostate tissue
Adam Phipps — University College London
Wed 13 May 13:40
Auditorium 1
Body Diffusion MRI
405-04-004
Characterizing the diffusion properties of prostate epithelium across Gleason grades using MR microscopy
Adam Phipps — University College London
Tue 12 May 16:00
Ballroom West
From Diffusion Characteristics Toward Clinical Impact
401-04-007
23Na-MRI and 1H-MRI to quantify the magnitude and time course of muscle disruption after high-load eccentric contractions
Ben Prestwich — University of Nottingham
Tue 12 May 16:00
Hall 1A
Metabolism
306-02-006
A Cleaner Cortical Grey Matter Diffusion Signal: CSF Partial Volume Correction Using Surface and PSF Estimation
Hossein Rafipoor — FMRIB Centre, Oxford Centre for Integrative Neuroimaging (OXCIN), University of Oxford
Mon 11 May 13:50
Auditorium 2
From Theory to Clinic: Advances in Diffusion MRI Modeling and Analysis
430-03-008
Implicit ESPIRiT: A compact, implicit representation of ESPIRiT maps with stochastic learning of eigenvectors
Shreya Ramachandran — University of California
Tue 12 May 13:40
Meeting Room 2.60
Advanced Image Reconstruction
607-01-009
PUDIP-Flow: An Unsupervised and Segmentation-Free Phase Unwrapping Method for Aortic and Cerebrovascular 4D Flow MRI
Yuyang Ren — ShanghaiTech University
Thu 14 May 08:30
Meeting Room 1.40
Advanced Cardiac Quantification Methods
630-03-009
A Fully Automated Pipeline for Multi-Region 4D Flow MRI Analysis
Yuyang Ren — ShanghaiTech University
Thu 14 May 16:00
Meeting Room 2.60
Hemodynamics and Flow
507-03-010
In Vivo Human Brain CEST MRI at 11.7T: First Results
Camélia Ressam — CEA NeuroSpin, Paris-Saclay University, CNRS, Gif-Sur-Yvette
Wed 13 May 13:40
Meeting Room 1.40
New Frontiers in CEST MRI
630-01-007
Background Field Removal and Dipole Inversion Algorithm Optimization for Spinal Cord Quantitative Susceptibility Mapping
Sebastian Rios — NeuroPoly Lab
Thu 14 May 08:30
Meeting Room 2.60
Quantitative Susceptibility Mapping: From Phase to Tissue Properties
466-06-009
Tapping into the potential of 0.6T MRI for non-contrast brain perfusion imaging: pCASL and VSI finger tapping and multi-delay
Emiel Roefs — Leiden University Medical Center
Tue 12 May 16:55
Digital Posters Row G
Mid-Field Technology and Sequences
669-04-006
Assessing Fibrotic Multimorbidity using Multiorgan MRI data in the UK Biobank
Margot Roeth — NIHR Nottingham Biomedical Research Centre, Queen’s Medical Centre, Nottingham
Thu 14 May 14:35
Digital Posters Row J
Twists and Turns: Pancreas, Cholangio, and Bowel MRI
407-04-004
Normative quantitative UTE MRI of the anterior cruciate ligament at 3 T: demographic stability across 56 healthy knees.
Maik Rothe — Medical Physics Group, University Clinic and Outpatient Clinic for Radiology, University Hospital Halle (Saale)
Tue 12 May 16:00
Meeting Room 1.40
New Outcome Measures for Studying the Joint
604-02-008
High-resolution 3D Manganese-enhanced MRI for the Detection of Viable Myocardium in a Post-Infarct Sheep Model
Alexis Rotondi — Univ. Bordeaux
Thu 14 May 13:40
Ballroom East
Perfusion, Flow, and Hemodynamics Across Scales
603-01-001
Composite Measures Combining Multimodal MRI, Plasma Biomarkers & Cardiovascular Risk are Sensitive to Cognition and Dementia
Ella Rowsthorn — Monash University
Thu 14 May 08:30
Auditorium 1
Dementia Not Related to Alzheimer's Disease
606-01-009
Motion and B₁ corrected cardiac ²³Na MRI in chronic kidney disease at 7 T
Laurent Ruck — University Hospital Erlangen, Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg (FAU)
Thu 14 May 08:30
Auditorium 2
Ultra-High Field Applications
404-02-004
In vivo biochemical subtyping of multiple sclerosis lesions using 7T 3D CRT free induction decay MRSI
Rebeka Rumbak — Medical University of Vienna
Tue 12 May 08:20
Ballroom East
Altered Metabolism Across Healthy Aging and Neurological Disorders
502-03-006
Pediatric Brain Age Prediction via Age-Gated Interpretable Dual-Pathway Model with Disentangled Myelination and Gyrification
Changmin Ryu — Yonsei University
Wed 13 May 13:40
Hall 1B
Defining "Normal" in Pediatric Brain MRI
301-04-005
Time and orientation-dependent transverse relaxation from magnetic susceptibility of realistic white matter microstructure
Anders Sandgaard — Aarhus University
Mon 11 May 16:10
Hall 1A
Innovations in Contrast Mechanisms for MRI
351-01-001
Multiple-Input Multiple-Output capabilities for the open-source and low-cost MaRCoS console
Luiz Guilherme Santos — Institute for Molecular Imaging and Instrumentation (i3M), Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas & Universitat Politècnica de València
Mon 11 May 08:20
Power Pitch Theatre 1
Emerging Devices, Novel Capabilities
351-01-001
Multiple-Input Multiple-Output capabilities for the open-source and low-cost MaRCoS console
Luiz Guilherme Santos — Institute for Molecular Imaging and Instrumentation (i3M), Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas & Universitat Politècnica de València
Mon 11 May 08:20
Power Pitch Theatre 1
Emerging Devices, Novel Capabilities
503-03-004
Generative diffusion bridge reconstruction for accelerated motion-compensated free-breathing abdominal MRI
Melanie Schellenberg — Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center
Wed 13 May 16:00
Auditorium 1
AI: Emerging Techniques and Clinical Applications
302-02-008
Phase-resolved functional lung and 19F MRI detect early treatment response to mepolizumab in patients with severe asthma
Julienne Scheller — German Center for Lung Research (DZL)
Mon 11 May 08:20
Hall 1B
Take a Breath: Chest, Thoracic, and Pulmonary MRI
531-02-011
Tract-Specific White Matter Microstructure Predicts Deep Brain Stimulation Response in Parkinson’s Disease
Devin Schoen — University of California San Francisco
Wed 13 May 13:40
Roof Terrace
Imaging Neurodegeneration in Motion: Multimodal Biomarkers for Alzheimer’s Disease and Parkinson’s Disease
531-02-011
Tract-Specific White Matter Microstructure Predicts Deep Brain Stimulation Response in Parkinson’s Disease
Devin Schoen — University of California San Francisco
Wed 13 May 13:40
Roof Terrace
Imaging Neurodegeneration in Motion: Multimodal Biomarkers for Alzheimer’s Disease and Parkinson’s Disease
531-02-013
Patterns of Deep Brain Stimulation Target Engagement Correlate with Postoperative Cognitive Change in Parkinson’s Disease
Devin Schoen — University of California San Francisco
Wed 13 May 13:40
Roof Terrace
Imaging Neurodegeneration in Motion: Multimodal Biomarkers for Alzheimer’s Disease and Parkinson’s Disease
531-02-013
Patterns of Deep Brain Stimulation Target Engagement Correlate with Postoperative Cognitive Change in Parkinson’s Disease
Devin Schoen — University of California San Francisco
Wed 13 May 13:40
Roof Terrace
Imaging Neurodegeneration in Motion: Multimodal Biomarkers for Alzheimer’s Disease and Parkinson’s Disease
605-01-006
Prospective motion correction in structural imaging using servo navigation: pushing for high update rates and high resolution
Matthias Serger — German Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases (DZNE e.V.)
Thu 14 May 08:30
Ballroom West
Motion Correction Across the Lifespan
652-02-007
Posture-Dependent Cortical Thickness Alterations Driven by CSF Pressure
Bingchen Shao — Zhejiang University
Thu 14 May 13:40
Power Pitch Theatre 2
Heart and Brain Interactions
652-02-007
Posture-Dependent Cortical Thickness Alterations Driven by CSF Pressure
Bingchen Shao — Zhejiang University
Thu 14 May 13:40
Power Pitch Theatre 2
Heart and Brain Interactions
404-04-004
Iron mapping in Parkinson’s disease using deep learning-enhanced susceptibility source separation
Hyeong-Geol Shin — Johns Hopkins University
Tue 12 May 16:00
Ballroom East
Applications of QSM and Iron in the Brain
302-03-010
Towards Motion-Robust, High-SNR Free-Breathing PDFF Mapping: Evaluation in Vertebral Bone Marrow, Paraspinal Muscle, Liver
Utsav Shrestha — University of Wisconsin - Madison
Mon 11 May 13:50
Hall 1B
Next-Level Pediatric MRI: Technical Advances To Image Children Better
505-02-009
Directed Structural Connectivity Inferred from Network Diffusion in Humans and Non-Human Primates
Benjamin Sipes — University of California San Francisco
Wed 13 May 08:20
Ballroom West
Insights into Psychiatric Disorders and the Human Connectome
601-03-002
Methylmalonic acid: a new target for Hadamard-edited MRS
Yulu Song — Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
Thu 14 May 16:00
Hall 1A
Spectroscopy and Spectroscopic Imaging
530-04-004
Towards Continuous Intra-Arterial Spin Labeling for Quantitative Myocardial Perfusion Mapping
Felix Spreter — University Medical Center Freiburg, Faculty of Medicine, University of Freiburg
Wed 13 May 16:00
Meeting Room 2.60
Perfusion and Coronary Assessment
504-02-005
Probing water exchange and structural disorder in the human brain with oscillating-gradient diffusion MRI
Dongsuk Sung — Athinoula A. Martinos Center for Biomedical Imaging, Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School
Wed 13 May 08:20
Ballroom East
Probing Brain Microstructure with Water: Applications
607-02-002
Flip Angle Modulation with Extended Readout for Co-Localized PDFF, R2*, and T1-Weighted Images
Jiayi Tang — University of Wisconsin - Madison
Thu 14 May 13:40
Meeting Room 1.40
Quantitative and Multi-Contrast MRI: Methods and Applications
363-01-002
Paired Regional Complementarity in Diffusion MRI Reveals Disease-Specific Microstructural Profiles in PD, MSA, and PSP
Abel Tessema — Ulsan National Institute of Science and Technology
Mon 11 May 08:20
Digital Posters Row D
Neurological Application of Advanced Diffusion and Quantitative MRI
303-01-008
Transfer learning–based segmentation of paediatric optic pathway gliomas with incomplete MRI
Xinyu Tian — University College London
Mon 11 May 08:20
Auditorium 1
AI Methods Beyond Reconstruction
430-03-001
k-space subregion-wise joint compression: compressing dynamic B0 and static RF field modulations for accelerated MRI
Rui Tian — Max Planck Institute for Biological Cybernetics
Tue 12 May 13:40
Meeting Room 2.60
Advanced Image Reconstruction
507-04-009
Spatio-Temporal Segmentation and Motion Analysis of Uterine Layers in Cine MRI Using Unet-LSTM and FlowNet-Lite
Smiti Tripathy — Friedrich-Alexander University Erlangen-Nuremberg
Wed 13 May 16:00
Meeting Room 1.40
Advanced Segmentation in MRI Across Scales and Domains
430-02-008
Single-breathhold 3D MR elastography in the liver, with simultaneous R2* and PDFF mapping
Donovan Tripp — King's College London
Tue 12 May 08:20
Meeting Room 2.60
Novel Acquisition Strategies and Open-Source Sequences
430-03-006
Evaluating Jacobian Approximation for Efficient Joint Optimization of Sampling and Reconstruction for Accelerated MRI
Idil Turasi — California Institute of Technology
Tue 12 May 13:40
Meeting Room 2.60
Advanced Image Reconstruction
606-03-005
Generalization of low-field 3D MRI acceleration via the CIRIM network across knee, spine and brain
Desirée van den Berg — Amsterdam University Medical Center, University of Amsterdam
Thu 14 May 16:00
Auditorium 2
Low Field MRI Applications
605-03-005
Glial metabolic alterations in an Alzheimer’s disease model with selective ApoE4-to-ApoE2 switching in the brain
Tamara Vasilkovska — University Of California, San Francisco (UCSF)
Thu 14 May 16:00
Ballroom West
Next-Generation Neuroimaging for Alzheimer’s Disease: From Molecules to Networks
405-04-005
Evaluation of Stimulated Echo Diffusion Weighted Imaging in Patients with Suspected Prostate Cancer
Srijyotsna Volety — University of Wisconsin - Madison
Tue 12 May 16:00
Ballroom West
From Diffusion Characteristics Toward Clinical Impact
408-04-002
ASTRAD: Acquisition-Sequence and k-Space Trajectory Co-Design for Accelerated MR Fingerprinting
Xiang Wang — The Hong Kong Polytechnic University
Tue 12 May 16:00
Meeting Room 1.60
Quantitative Imaging: MR Fingerprinting
603-03-008
Fusing Medical History Trajectories and Multi-modal Image Features for Disease Risk Prediction
Zian Wang — School of Computer Science, Fudan University
Thu 14 May 16:00
Auditorium 1
AI for Diagnostic and Prognostic Applications
451-03-016
Improving Risk Stratification of Myocarditis with Quantitative CMR: External Validation of the 2025 ESC Guideline
Yining Wang — National Center for Cardiovascular Diseases and Fuwai Hospital, Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences and Peking Union Medical College
Tue 12 May 16:00
Power Pitch Theatre 1
Cardiac Structure, Function, and Tissue Characterization
451-03-016
Improving Risk Stratification of Myocarditis with Quantitative CMR: External Validation of the 2025 ESC Guideline
Yining Wang — National Center for Cardiovascular Diseases and Fuwai Hospital, Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences and Peking Union Medical College
Tue 12 May 16:00
Power Pitch Theatre 1
Cardiac Structure, Function, and Tissue Characterization
603-01-009
Assessment of Tissue–CSF Water Exchange in MCI/Dementia Using Magnetization Transfer Indirect Spin Labeling (MISL) MRI at 3T
Jiawen Wang — The University of Hong Kong
Thu 14 May 08:30
Auditorium 1
Dementia Not Related to Alzheimer's Disease
406-02-003
Rapid Tissue-CSF Exchange in the Perivascular Space Detected by Magnetization Transfer Indirect Spin Labeling
Yihan Wu — Johns Hopkins University
Tue 12 May 13:40
Auditorium 2
The Dynamic Brain: Flow, Pressure, and Exchange
504-04-001
Nitric Oxide–Induced Methemoglobin as an Endogenous and Autologous MRI Perfusion Contrast Agent at 3T
Shiman Wu — Hushan Hospital, Fudan University
Wed 13 May 16:00
Ballroom East
Cancer Imaging and Spectroscopy
452-01-008
Charting brain physiological asymmetry during childhood with high-resolution pCASL perfusion MRI
Wentao Wu — Children's Hospital of Philadelphia
Tue 12 May 08:20
Power Pitch Theatre 2
Pediatric Imaging Frontiers
452-01-008
Charting brain physiological asymmetry during childhood with high-resolution pCASL perfusion MRI
Wentao Wu — Children's Hospital of Philadelphia
Tue 12 May 08:20
Power Pitch Theatre 2
Pediatric Imaging Frontiers
507-03-006
3D EPTI-CEST: Snapshot and distortion-free whole-brain 3D CEST MRI
Jian Wu — Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School
Wed 13 May 13:40
Meeting Room 1.40
New Frontiers in CEST MRI
331-02-012
Reliability of an Automated Quantification Tool for Brain Sagging Signs in Spontaneous Intracranial Hypotension
Pei-Yun Wu — National Yang Ming Chiao Tung University
Mon 11 May 13:50
Roof Terrace
AI Frontiers in Image Analysis
331-02-012
Reliability of an Automated Quantification Tool for Brain Sagging Signs in Spontaneous Intracranial Hypotension
Pei-Yun Wu — National Yang Ming Chiao Tung University
Mon 11 May 13:50
Roof Terrace
AI Frontiers in Image Analysis
406-01-008
Ongoing slow oscillation shapes long-range neural activity propagation upon a single thalamic input
Linshan Xie — The University of Hong Kong
Tue 12 May 08:20
Auditorium 2
fMRI: Acquisition and Preprocessing
605-03-009
Gradient Echo with Improved Microstructure-Informed Myelin, Iron and Water Mapping predicts Cognitive Decline in Aging and AD
MANXI XU — China-Japan Friendship Hospital
Thu 14 May 16:00
Ballroom West
Next-Generation Neuroimaging for Alzheimer’s Disease: From Molecules to Networks
607-01-001
A CMRsim-based Simulator for Quantitative First-Pass Myocardial Perfusion CMR
Chang Yan — University and ETH Zürich
Thu 14 May 08:30
Meeting Room 1.40
Advanced Cardiac Quantification Methods
401-04-006
Quantify TAVR Relieved Metabolic Stress in Aortic Stenosis Patients using Noninvasive Coronary Sinus Oximetry by CMR
Chia Chi Yang — Cedars-Sinai Medical Center
Tue 12 May 16:00
Hall 1A
Metabolism
452-02-003
Minimizing CSF Contamination in Velocity-selective Arterial Spin Labeling
Zidong Yang — University of Southern California
Tue 12 May 13:40
Power Pitch Theatre 2
Methodology: Acquisition and Analysis
452-02-003
Minimizing CSF Contamination in Velocity-selective Arterial Spin Labeling
Zidong Yang — University of Southern California
Tue 12 May 13:40
Power Pitch Theatre 2
Methodology: Acquisition and Analysis
507-04-007
Deep Learning 4D Segmentation of Short-Axis CMR to Quantify Peak Filling and Ejection Rate in Single Ventricle Patients
Tina Yao — University College London
Wed 13 May 16:00
Meeting Room 1.40
Advanced Segmentation in MRI Across Scales and Domains
404-03-002
Increased Blood-Brain Barrier Water Permeability in Neuromyelitis Optica Spectrum Disorder during Remission Period
Shuwan Yu — Tsinghua University
Tue 12 May 13:40
Ballroom East
Multiscale MRI in Neuroinflammation
451-02-012
In Vivo Anisotropic Myocardial Stiffness Mapping Using ECG-Gated Electromagnetic Multifrequency MRE with TWE-NITI Inversion
Chengyuan Yu — School of Biomedical Engineering, Shanghai Jiao Tong University, Shanghai 200240
Tue 12 May 13:40
Power Pitch Theatre 1
Advances in Contrast Mechanisms
451-02-012
In Vivo Anisotropic Myocardial Stiffness Mapping Using ECG-Gated Electromagnetic Multifrequency MRE with TWE-NITI Inversion
Chengyuan Yu — School of Biomedical Engineering, Shanghai Jiao Tong University, Shanghai 200240
Tue 12 May 13:40
Power Pitch Theatre 1
Advances in Contrast Mechanisms
606-02-005
A Deep-Learning-Based Label-Free No-Reference Image Quality Assessment Metric Evaluated with Proton and Sodium MRI
Shuaiyu Yuan — University of Cambridge
Thu 14 May 13:40
Auditorium 2
Beyond Protons: Advances in Multinuclear and Hyperpolarized MRI
451-02-008
Characterizing Metabolic and Compositional Heterogeneity of Calf Muscle using CEST MRI at 3 T
Huabin Zhang — The University of Hong Kong
Tue 12 May 13:40
Power Pitch Theatre 1
Advances in Contrast Mechanisms
451-02-008
Characterizing Metabolic and Compositional Heterogeneity of Calf Muscle using CEST MRI at 3 T
Huabin Zhang — The University of Hong Kong
Tue 12 May 13:40
Power Pitch Theatre 1
Advances in Contrast Mechanisms
531-01-015
Distribution Optimization via Numerical Algorithms (DONA) for Accelerating CEST MRI Acquisition
Huabin Zhang — The University of Hong Kong
Wed 13 May 08:20
Roof Terrace
Quantitative Imaging: Applications
531-01-015
Distribution Optimization via Numerical Algorithms (DONA) for Accelerating CEST MRI Acquisition
Huabin Zhang — The University of Hong Kong
Wed 13 May 08:20
Roof Terrace
Quantitative Imaging: Applications
402-03-002
Quantitative High-Resolution Metabolic Imaging of the Human Brain
Yibo Zhao — University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Tue 12 May 13:40
Hall 1B
Metabolic Imaging and MR Spectroscopy: Methods and Application
605-01-008
Respiratory Motion Correction for High-Resolution Supine Breast Imaging using a Golden-Angle 3D Cones Acquisition
Xuetong Zhou — Stanford University
Thu 14 May 08:30
Ballroom West
Motion Correction Across the Lifespan
508-02-005
End-to-End Framework for Real-Time Image Reconstruction, Device and Tissue Tracking in MRI-Guided Liver Interventions
Wenqi Zhou — Samueli School of Engineering, University of California Los Angeles, Los Angeles
Wed 13 May 08:20
Meeting Room 1.60
Novel Reconstruction Techniques for Fast Imaging
ISMRT President's Award
230-05-001
Developing MRI Dental Imaging Pathways: Radiographer Perspectives on Paediatric Dental MRI (ddMRI).
Kathleen Colford — Kings College London
Sun 10 May 13:00
Meeting Room 2.60
Awards
John A Koveleski (JAK) Award
230-05-002
Social Media as a Tool to Democratize MRI Education: Opportunities and Pitfalls
Isaac Ntoruru — The Chuka University
Sun 10 May 13:00
Meeting Room 2.60
Awards
Posters & Exhibits
Digital and traditional poster sessions, exhibition hall
Exhibition Hall
Exhibition Hall (Halls 2-4A)
Mon 11
10:00–17:00
Tue 12
10:00–17:00
Wed 13
10:00–17:00
Thu 14
10:00–16:30
View Exhibitors
Poster Viewing
Exhibition Hall (Halls 2-4A)
Mon 11
07:00–19:00
Tue 12
07:00–19:00
Wed 13
07:00–19:00
Thu 14
07:00–15:15
Browse Posters
Saturday, 09 May
11:50–12:15 SAST
Winning Poster Presentations
Meeting Room 2.60
12:30–14:00 SAST
Lunch, Exhibition & Poster Tour
Roof Terrace
Monday, 11 May
08:20–09:15 SAST
MOCO from Head to Toe
Digital Posters Row A
Advanced Quantitative Liver MRI: Radiomics, Elastography, and AI
Digital Posters Row B
Neuro Sequences, Applications, and Traveling Phantoms
Digital Posters Row C
Neurological Application of Advanced Diffusion and Quantitative MRI
Digital Posters Row D
fMRI: Analyses
Digital Posters Row E
Cardiomyopathies
Digital Posters Row F
Cerebral Small Vessel Disease: Imaging Biomarkers, Pathophysiology, and Clinical Impact
Digital Posters Row G
Fuel and Function: Metabolism in the Body
Digital Posters Row H
Registration, Atlases, and Motion
Digital Posters Row I
RF Coils and Safety
Digital Posters Row J
09:15–10:10 SAST
Machine Learning for Image Reconstruction
Digital Posters Row A
Prostate: Clinical Applications, AI, and Post-Processing
Digital Posters Row B
Clinical Diffusion Neuro
Digital Posters Row C
All About Diffusion
Digital Posters Row D
Innovations in Brain Tumor Imaging: Quantitative MRI, Radiogenomics, and Deep-Learning Approaches
Digital Posters Row E
Post-Processing of Cardiovascular MRI
Digital Posters Row F
Brain-Body Axis
Digital Posters Row G
Cancer Detection and Therapies
Digital Posters Row H
Segmentation for Musculoskeletal MRI Applications
Digital Posters Row I
Imaging Parkinson’s Disease: Multimodal Biomarkers of Progression and Phenotype
Digital Posters Row J
08:20–09:15 SAST
All About Neuroinflammation
Traditional Posters | Exhibition Hall
Vascular and Vessel Wall Imaging
Traditional Posters | Exhibition Hall
09:15–10:10 SAST
Brain Functional Methods
Traditional Posters | Exhibition Hall
13:50–15:40 SAST
Young Investigator Awards Poster Session
Digital Posters Row A
13:50–14:45 SAST
Thermometry and Other Contrast Mechanisms
Digital Posters Row B
Neuroimaging Signatures Across the Psychiatric Spectrum
Digital Posters Row C
MRI in Clinical Practice: Diagnostic Applications, Quantitative Imaging, and Emerging Techniques
Digital Posters Row D
Diffusion MRI Applications in Disease
Digital Posters Row E
Body Diffusion MRI Methods
Digital Posters Row F
Radiomics: Body
Digital Posters Row G
Muscle Microstructure and Deformation
Digital Posters Row H
Low Field Systems and Applications
Digital Posters Row I
Multiparametric MRI in Stroke
Digital Posters Row J
14:45–15:40 SAST
Advanced Neuroimaging with MRI: CEST and APT Techniques
Digital Posters Row B
Spectroscopy and Spectroscopic Imaging: Neuro I
Digital Posters Row C
From Iron to Intelligence: Quantitative Imaging and AI in Brain Disorders
Digital Posters Row D
Image Reconstruction Using Generative Models
Digital Posters Row E
Body MR: Potpourri of Techniques in Uterine, Cervical, Liver, and Kidney Imaging
Digital Posters Row F
Probes and Targets
Digital Posters Row G
Multimodality and Unconventional Cardiovascular MRI
Digital Posters Row H
Novel MRI Hardware
Digital Posters Row I
Visualizing Intracranial and Carotid Arteries: MRA, VWI, and Beyond
Digital Posters Row J
13:50–14:45 SAST
Cardiac Metabolism and Diffusion
Traditional Posters | Exhibition Hall
Analysis in Neurodegenerative Disease
Traditional Posters | Exhibition Hall
14:45–15:40 SAST
Analysis: Cardiovascular and Body
Traditional Posters | Exhibition Hall
Quantitative Imaging
Traditional Posters | Exhibition Hall
16:10–17:05 SAST
Quantitative Mapping: Acquisition and Reconstruction
Digital Posters Row A
Quantitative Imaging: Head and Neck I
Digital Posters Row B
Spectroscopy and Spectroscopic Imaging: Neuro II
Digital Posters Row C
Classification and Analysis in the Brain
Digital Posters Row D
Classification in Diffusion MRI I
Digital Posters Row E
Novel Acquisition Methods
Digital Posters Row F
Quantitative Applications in Body MRI: Make the Numbers Count
Digital Posters Row G
Neuroinflammation: Myelin and Iron
Digital Posters Row H
All Things RF
Digital Posters Row I
Hyperpolarized Gases
Digital Posters Row J
17:05–18:00 SAST
Acquisition, Reconstruction, and Analysis
Digital Posters Row A
Quantitative Imaging: Head and Neck II
Digital Posters Row B
Neuroimaging Biomarkers of Aging, Vascular Health, and Dementia
Digital Posters Row C
Hemodynamics and Flow
Digital Posters Row D
Classification in Diffusion MRI II
Digital Posters Row E
Diffusion MRI Reconstruction Methods
Digital Posters Row F
Body Diffusion MRI Applications
Digital Posters Row G
Advanced Methods in Renal MRI
Digital Posters Row H
Novel Gradients
Digital Posters Row I
Advances in Interventional MRI: Guidance, Motion Management, and Precision Treatment Technologies
Digital Posters Row J
16:10–17:05 SAST
Low Field MRI
Traditional Posters | Exhibition Hall
17:05–18:00 SAST
Phantoms and Safety
Traditional Posters | Exhibition Hall
Tuesday, 12 May
08:20–09:15 SAST
Brain Physiology and Pain
Digital Posters Row A
Cardiac Tissue Characterization
Digital Posters Row B
Contrast Mechanisms Potpourri Including Registered/Clinical Abstracts
Digital Posters Row C
Data-Driven Reconstruction: From Networks to Clinical Practice
Digital Posters Row D
Diffusion MRI Analysis
Digital Posters Row E
Hyperpolarization: Novel Applications
Digital Posters Row F
Rectal Cancer
Digital Posters Row G
Quantitative Imaging Beyond the CNS
Digital Posters Row H
Quantitative Neuroimaging of Neurodegeneration, Metabolism, and Brain Microstructure
Digital Posters Row I
MRI in Africa: Advancing Neuroimaging Research, Capacity, and Equity in African Populations
Digital Posters Row J
09:15–10:10 SAST
From Bench to Bedside: All About the Brain in Health and Alzheimer’s Disease
Digital Posters Row A
AI To Make Protocols, Plan, QC, and Correct Motion
Digital Posters Row B
Diffusion MRI Neuroscience
Digital Posters Row C
Imaging Stroke Recovery: From Microstructure to Personalized Therapy
Digital Posters Row D
Validating Diffusion MRI: Reproducibility, Simulations, and Phantoms
Digital Posters Row E
Novel Developments and Applications in Flow MRI
Digital Posters Row F
Quantitative Applications in Body MRI: In Numbers We Trust
Digital Posters Row G
Quantitative Pelvic, Thorax, and Abdomen
Digital Posters Row H
Type 2 Diabetes
Digital Posters Row I
Low Field Applications and Systems
Digital Posters Row J
08:20–09:15 SAST
Acquisitions and Reconstructions
Traditional Posters | Exhibition Hall
Decoding Stroke with Imaging and AI: New Frontiers in Cerebrovascular Research
Traditional Posters | Exhibition Hall
09:15–10:10 SAST
Fat-Water Separation and Fat Suppression
Traditional Posters | Exhibition Hall
Diffusion: Tractography Methods
Traditional Posters | Exhibition Hall
13:40–14:35 SAST
Image Classification for Breast Cancer
Digital Posters Row A
Artifact Correction Strategies in Brain and Body
Digital Posters Row B
Heart and Brain Axis
Digital Posters Row C
Metabolic Parameters in Stroke
Digital Posters Row D
Neurodegenerative Diseases
Digital Posters Row E
Neurography, Pain, and Spine
Digital Posters Row F
Pulse Sequences with a Focus on Quantitative Imaging
Digital Posters Row G
Perfusion and Coronary
Digital Posters Row H
Segmentation for Cardiac Applications
Digital Posters Row I
Software and Analysis for MR Spectroscopy and Chemical Shift Imaging
Digital Posters Row J
14:35–15:30 SAST
Breast MRI Sequences and Clinical Developments
Digital Posters Row A
Quantitative MRI Across the Body
Digital Posters Row B
Body, Cardiovascular, and Musculoskeletal Systems in Small Animals
Digital Posters Row C
Advanced Microstructural Imaging of White Matter and Traumatic Brain Injury
Digital Posters Row D
Diffusion MRI: Registered and Clinical Abstracts
Digital Posters Row E
Image Analysis for Alzheimer's and Parkinson's
Digital Posters Row F
Magnets and Shims
Digital Posters Row G
Cardiovascular Imaging and Motion Correction Strategies
Digital Posters Row H
Pediatric Cardiopulmonary MRI
Digital Posters Row I
MRI and MRS in Muscle in Health and Disease
Digital Posters Row J
13:40–14:35 SAST
Hardware and Software Tools for System Improvement
Traditional Posters | Exhibition Hall
Advanced Diffusion Modeling for Microstructure Mapping
Traditional Posters | Exhibition Hall
14:35–15:30 SAST
From Zero to Short TE MSK MRI
Traditional Posters | Exhibition Hall
16:00–16:55 SAST
When Brain Clearance Fails: Glymphatic Dysfunction Across Disorders
Digital Posters Row A
Advances in Neuroimaging and Biomarkers for Brain Health and Disease
Digital Posters Row B
Interventional MRI: Device, Catheter Tracking, and Image-Guided Therapy
Digital Posters Row C
Malignant Tumor in the Body
Digital Posters Row D
MR-Based Quantitative Image and Image Processing
Digital Posters Row E
Tractography Applications
Digital Posters Row F
Pediatric Low Field MRI
Digital Posters Row G
Frontiers of System Design
Digital Posters Row H
Safety
Digital Posters Row I
Non-Proton MRI: Methods and Applications
Digital Posters Row J
16:55–17:50 SAST
Imaging the Brain’s Microenvironment: From Glymphatics to Cognition
Digital Posters Row A
Multimodal Acquisitions for Brain Function Studies
Digital Posters Row B
Breast MRI: Technical Developments
Digital Posters Row C
Image Analysis for Cancer
Digital Posters Row D
Novel Diffusion and Motion Correction in Body MRI
Digital Posters Row E
Diffusion Acquisition
Digital Posters Row F
Mid-Field Technology and Sequences
Digital Posters Row G
RF Arrays and Applications
Digital Posters Row H
Acquisition and Reconstruction Strategies for Dynamic and Cardiac Imaging
Digital Posters Row I
Radiomics: Applications
Digital Posters Row J
16:00–16:55 SAST
Analysis: Neuro
Traditional Posters | Exhibition Hall
MRI in Infectious Diseases
Traditional Posters | Exhibition Hall
16:55–17:50 SAST
Spectroscopy Traditional Posters
Traditional Posters | Exhibition Hall
Integrated MRI-Based Approaches for Preoperative Diagnosis, Grading, and Prognostic Prediction of Brain Tumors
Traditional Posters | Exhibition Hall
Wednesday, 13 May
08:20–09:15 SAST
New Developments in QSM I
Digital Posters Row A
Generative Models for Image Synthesis
Digital Posters Row B
Lung and Thoracic Oncological MRI
Digital Posters Row C
Novel Neuro Applications
Digital Posters Row D
Perfusion and ASL Imaging: Recent Advances
Digital Posters Row E
Neuroinflammation: Fluids and Flow
Digital Posters Row F
Detectable Changes in Dementia
Digital Posters Row G
Acquisitions for fMRI
Digital Posters Row H
Unconventional Physics and Engineering
Digital Posters Row I
Signal Modeling and Signal Preparation: Novel Approaches
Digital Posters Row J
09:15–10:10 SAST
New Developments in QSM II
Digital Posters Row A
Classification and Analysis in the Body
Digital Posters Row B
Breast MRI and the Role of AI
Digital Posters Row C
Cartilage 2026
Digital Posters Row D
Interventional MRI: General
Digital Posters Row E
Neuro-Oncology and Ear, Nose, and Throat Cancer
Digital Posters Row F
MRI Markers of Dementia
Digital Posters Row G
Open-Source Software, Sequences, and Reconstruction Algorithms
Digital Posters Row H
System Imperfections and Field Monitoring
Digital Posters Row I
Novel Pulse Sequences and Reconstruction Strategies
Digital Posters Row J
08:20–09:15 SAST
AI Applications in Body MRI
Traditional Posters | Exhibition Hall
Physics and Engineering Smorgasbord
Traditional Posters | Exhibition Hall
09:15–10:10 SAST
Quantitative and Diffusion MRI of the Liver
Traditional Posters | Exhibition Hall
AI Methods
Traditional Posters | Exhibition Hall
13:40–14:35 SAST
Congenital Heart Disease, Valves, and Vessels
Digital Posters Row A
Fancy Sequences and Encoding Strategies
Digital Posters Row B
Machine Learning in Neuroimaging
Digital Posters Row C
Image Classification for Brain Cancer
Digital Posters Row D
fMRI: Development and Aging
Digital Posters Row E
Mesoscale Functional MRI and Acquisition Strategies
Digital Posters Row F
Radiomics Potpourri
Digital Posters Row G
Standardizing MRI Through Data Formats and Phantoms
Digital Posters Row H
MR Biomarkers of Hepatic Steatosis, Fibrosis, and Liver Disease
Digital Posters Row I
Super-Resolving MRI: Methods and Applications
Digital Posters Row J
14:35–15:30 SAST
Automated Cardiovascular MRI
Digital Posters Row A
Deep Learning Meets k-Space: New Frontiers in Reconstruction
Digital Posters Row B
AI/DL in Pediatrics
Digital Posters Row C
Diffusion MRI and Other Modalities
Digital Posters Row D
Imaging Depression
Digital Posters Row E
Neuroradiomics
Digital Posters Row F
Predicting Neurologic Outcomes
Digital Posters Row G
Quantitative and Multimodal MRI Biomarkers Across Neurologic and Systemic Disorders
Digital Posters Row H
Prostate: Technical Applications, Sequences, and Coil Development
Digital Posters Row I
Spectroscopy: Acquisition and Reconstruction
Digital Posters Row J
13:40–14:35 SAST
MRI of Brown Adipose Tissue: Feel the Heat
Traditional Posters | Exhibition Hall
14:35–15:30 SAST
Vision and Language Models in MRI
Traditional Posters | Exhibition Hall
ISMRM Chapter Poster Presentations
Traditional Posters
16:00–16:55 SAST
Acquisition Strategies Across Organs and Field Strengths
Digital Posters Row A
Advanced MR Techniques in Cervical, Genital, Placental, and Fetal Disorders
Digital Posters Row B
Fetal and Neonatal Imaging
Digital Posters Row C
fMRI: Task-Based and Stimulation
Digital Posters Row D
The qMRI Variety Show: A Little Bit of Everything
Digital Posters Row E
Segmentation for Body Applications
Digital Posters Row F
MSK: Clinical and Cutting-Edge
Digital Posters Row G
Novel Contrast Mechanisms I
Digital Posters Row H
Image Reconstruction I
Digital Posters Row I
Spectroscopy and Spectroscopic Imaging: Methods
Digital Posters Row J
16:55–17:50 SAST
AI Image Processing
Digital Posters Row A
New and Novel Acquisition and Reconstruction
Digital Posters Row B
fMRI: Preclinical
Digital Posters Row C
From Molecular Signatures to Surgical Guidance: Cutting-Edge MRI in Brain Tumor Care
Digital Posters Row D
Segmentation for Neuro Applications
Digital Posters Row E
Diagnostic Utility of Advanced Techniques in MSK Applications
Digital Posters Row F
Quantitative Outcome Measures in MSK MRI
Digital Posters Row G
Novel Contrast Mechanisms II
Digital Posters Row H
Image Reconstruction II
Digital Posters Row I
Magnetization Transfer and Relaxometry
Digital Posters Row J
16:00–16:55 SAST
Preclinical
Traditional Posters | Exhibition Hall
Imaging Cerebrovascular Physiology in Stroke and Cerebral Arteriopathies
Traditional Posters | Exhibition Hall
Quantitative Imaging
Traditional Posters | Exhibition Hall
16:55–17:50 SAST
Brain Function Application on Paper
Traditional Posters | Exhibition Hall
Pediatric MR Imaging in Practice
Traditional Posters | Exhibition Hall
Thursday, 14 May
08:30–09:25 SAST
A Tour of Body Oncology
Digital Posters Row A
Advances in ASL
Digital Posters Row B
Advanced Quantitative and Diffusion MRI for Epilepsy: From Lesion Detection to Clinical Translation
Digital Posters Row C
Diffusion MRI, Iron Quantification, and Steatosis in Human and Preclinical Studies
Digital Posters Row D
Cerebellar Function
Digital Posters Row E
fMRI: Applications in Neurology and Psychiatry I
Digital Posters Row F
Hyperpolarization: Novel Methods
Digital Posters Row G
Innovations in Diffusion MRI: Systems, Sequences, and Protocol Design
Digital Posters Row H
Molecular Imaging and Ultra High Field Acquisition
Digital Posters Row I
Neuroinflammation: Metabolites, Function, and AI
Digital Posters Row J
09:25–10:20 SAST
Water-Fat MRI
Digital Posters Row A
Cardiac Structure and Function
Digital Posters Row B
Advances in Chemical Exchange MRI: CEST, APT, and NOE II
Digital Posters Row C
Diffusion: DWI/DTI/DKI
Digital Posters Row D
Large Animals
Digital Posters Row E
fMRI: Applications in Neurology and Psychiatry II
Digital Posters Row F
Multiparametric Quantitative MR Methods
Digital Posters Row G
Diffusion Microstructure and Beyond
Digital Posters Row H
Spectroscopy and Spectroscopic Imaging: Applications
Digital Posters Row I
Neuroimaging Biomarkers Across the Spectrum of Brain Disorders
Digital Posters Row J
13:40–14:35 SAST
Advances in Chemical Exchange MRI: CEST, APT, and NOE I
Digital Posters Row A
Noise and Artifact Mitigation in MRI
Digital Posters Row B
Classification: Other Cancer
Digital Posters Row C
Glymphatic System Imaging: From Neurofluid Transport to Neurodegeneration
Digital Posters Row D
Innovations in Head and Neck Imaging: From Coil Design to Clinical Impact
Digital Posters Row E
fMRI: Applications in Neurology and Psychiatry III
Digital Posters Row F
Neuro-Biomarkers
Digital Posters Row G
MR Acquisition Gems
Digital Posters Row H
Quantitative MRI Software: Tools and Applications
Digital Posters Row I
RF Arrays and Systems
Digital Posters Row J
14:35–15:30 SAST
AI: Anything Synthetic or Correcting Artifacts
Digital Posters Row A
AI-Based Analysis in MR Imaging
Digital Posters Row B
Artificial Intelligence-Based Image Reconstruction in the Body
Digital Posters Row C
Cerebral Small Vessel Disease: Network, Glymphatic, and Blood Flow
Digital Posters Row D
Image Reconstruction: Self-Supervised and Implicit
Digital Posters Row E
MR in Organoid/Phantom/Plant/Serum
Digital Posters Row F
Neuroimaging of Brain Development from Fetal Life Through Adolescence: Structure, Function, and Prediction
Digital Posters Row G
Novel Visualization and Assessment of Osseous Tissues
Digital Posters Row H
Pulse Sequences: Design and Optimization
Digital Posters Row I
Twists and Turns: Pancreas, Cholangio, and Bowel MRI
Digital Posters Row J
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