Designed especially for neurobiologists, FluoRender is an interactive tool for multi-channel fluorescence microscopy data visualization and analysis.
Deep brain stimulation
BrainStimulator is a set of networks that are used in SCIRun to perform simulations of brain stimulation such as transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) and magnetic transcranial stimulation (TMS).
Developing software tools for science has always been a central vision of the SCI Institute.
vis miccaiWith fall conferences in full swing, the SCI Institute and our alumni had an amazing showing.

Alex Bigelow and SCI alumnus Roni Choudhury, who, along with Jeff Baumes from Kitware received the Visualization in Practice Best Paper Award at the IEEE Visualization Conference for their paper: Resonant Laboratory and Candela: Spreading your Visualization Ideas to the Masses. Chris Johnson was a participant in the panel: Pathways for Theoretical Advances in Visualization, moderated by Min Chen, which won the best panel award at the IEEE Visualization Conference. The other panelists included Georges Grinstein, Jessie Kennedy, Tamara Munzner, and Melanie Tory. Finally, congratulations to SCI Alumnus Julien Tierny, who with Hamish Carr received the Scientific Visualization Best Paper Award at the IEEE Visualization Conference for their paper: Jacobi Fiber Surfaces for Bivariate Reeb Space Computation.

Yong Wan recieved best poster at BioVis for his display of the functionality and application of FluoRender.

Caleb Rottman, who was a finalist for the MICCAI 2016 Young Scientist Award for his paper: Diffeomorphic Density Registration in Thoracic Computed Tomography. Caleb Rottman, Ben Larson, Pouya Sabouri, Amit Sawant, Sarang Joshi. Also at MICCAI, recent SCI Alumnus Miaomiao Zhang (Ph.D. 2015), was another of the finalists for the Young Scientist Award for her paper: Low-Dimensional Statistics of Anatomical Variability Via Compact Representation of Image Deformations. Miaomiao Zhang, William Sandy Wells, Polina Golland.