Eli Schwartz, Leonid Karlinsky, et al.
NeurIPS 2018
Asynchronous transfer mode (ATM) technology emerges as a leading candidate for medical image transmission in both local area network (LAN) and wide area network (WAN) applications. This paper describes the performance of an ATM LAN and WAN network at the University of California, San Francisco. The measurements were obtained using an intensive care unit (ICU) server connecting to four image workstations (WS) at four different locations of a hospital-integrated picture archiving and communication system (HI-PACS) in a daily regular clinical environment. Four types of performance were evaluated: magnetic disk-to-disk, disk-to-redundant array of inexpensive disks (RAID), RAID-to-memory, and memory-to-memory. Results demonstrate that the transmission rate between two workstations can reach 5-6 Mbytes/s from RAID- to-memory, and 8-10 Mbytes/s from memory-to-memory. When the server has to send images to all four workstations simultaneously, the transmission rate to each WS is about 4 Mbytes/s. Both situations are adequate for radiologic image communications for picture archiving and communication systems (PACS) and teleradiology applications.
Eli Schwartz, Leonid Karlinsky, et al.
NeurIPS 2018
James E. Gentile, Nalini Ratha, et al.
BTAS 2009
Lalit R Bahl, Steven V. De Gennaro, et al.
IEEE Transactions on Speech and Audio Processing
Conrad Albrecht, Jannik Schneider, et al.
CVPR 2025