'Avatar' 3D images help Scots medical students

ADVANCED 3D computer technology, made famous in the animated sci-fi film Avatar, is being harnessed to train a "PlayStation generation" of medical students in Scotland.

Experts at Aberdeen University have joined forces with the Digital Learning Foundation to develop pioneering software which can transform routine medical scans into a 3D image within seconds.

Medical undergraduates can then study the results of the enhanced MRI and CAT scans using special glasses similar to those worn by cinema audiences.

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Dr Neil Hamilton, who is leading the research, said the system would allow students to see the human body as never before.

Dr Hamilton, the director of the university's Medi-CAL Unit, said: "We can take an existing medical scan, that has been anonymised, feed it into a computer and have a 3D stereoscopic image ready for teaching within a matter of seconds, rather than weeks.

"We could take a scan of a head injury, for example, input the scan into our system and create a virtual model of the head."

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