The process of generating three-dimensional images by electronic, photographic, or other methods. For example, three-dimensional images can be generated by assembling multiple tomographic images with the aid of a computer, while photographic 3-D images (HOLOGRAPHY) can be made by exposing film to the interference pattern created when two laser light sources shine on an object
image watermarking. : Advances in telemedicine for health monitoring : technologies, design and applications / edited by Tarik A. Rashid, Chinmay Chakraborty and Kym Fraser
Imagen -- Congresos : Level set and PDE based reconstruction methods in imaging : Cetraro, Italy 2008 / Martin Burger, Andrea C.G. Mennucci, Stanley Osher, Martin Rumpf ; Editors: Martin Burger, Stanley Osher
Hippocampe (Cerveau) -- Imagerie par résonance magnétique. : The human hippocampus : functional anatomy, vascularization, and serial sections with MRI / Henri M. Duvernoy ; in collaboration with F. Cattin [and others] ; drawings by J.L. Vannson
Imagerie pour le diagnostic en pédiatrie. : Imaging in pediatric skeletal trauma : techniques and applications / K.J. Johnson, E. Bache (eds.) ; with contributions by E. Bache [and others] ; foreword by A.L. Baert
The use of mental images produced by the imagination as a form of psychotherapy. It can be classified by the modality of its content: visual, verbal, auditory, olfactory, tactile, gustatory, or kinesthetic. Common themes derive from nature imagery (e.g., forests and mountains), water imagery (e.g., brooks and oceans), travel imagery, etc. Imagery is used in the treatment of mental disorders and in helping patients cope with other diseases. Imagery often forms a part of HYPNOSIS, of AUTOGENIC TRAINING, of RELAXATION TECHNIQUES, and of BEHAVIOR THERAPY. (From Encyclopedia of Human Behavior, vol. 4, pp29-30, 1994)