Magnetic resonance imaging examples from Paul Lauterbur's lecture at the National Academy of Sciences
- 1992-Apr-27
This video was shown during a talk that Dr. Paul Lauterbur gave at the National Academy of Sciences in 1992. It contains examples of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) used on a variety of subjects: the putamen structure of a human brain and the brain as a whole; a kernel of corn; a potato being cooked; and the circulatory system of a rat or mouse. Most of the video is silent, except for two sections: a narrated guide to using MRI to inform brain surgery, and a video of the construction of a superferric magnet at the Texas Accelerator Center (which was part of the planned but never completed Superconducting Super Collider).
This video also includes a 3-D visualization of a starburst dendrimer polymer, which can be used as a contrast agent in MRI imaging, but this model was not produced using MRI.
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The Papers of Paul C. Lauterbur were donated to the Science History Institute in 2009 by Dr. Joan Dawson. |
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Cite as
Lauterbur, Paul C., University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Michigan Molecular Institute, National Institutes of Health (U.S.), and University of Chicago. “Magnetic Resonance Imaging Examples from Paul Lauterbur's Lecture at the National Academy of Sciences.” Dvds, April 27, 1992. Papers of Paul C. Lauterbur, Box 69. Science History Institute. Philadelphia. https://digital.sciencehistory.org/works/43p7t99.
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