Full text: Reports and invited papers (Part 4)

  
56 
plines will take time, but the future course 
seems almost assured (perhaps inevitable). 
More specifically, the symposium demon- 
strated that: 
(1) The mathematical strategy of bio- 
stereometrics is sound, but the methods must be 
further refined to make solutions more efficient 
and cost-effective. 
(2) There is no universal “best” method of 
stereometric sensing. The range of potential ap- 
plications is so broad and the measurement con- 
ditions are so varied that we can expect to see 
many different techniques and instrumentation 
systems play important roles in the future. 
(3) More objective evaluation of the various 
approaches to stereometric sensing is needed. 
(4) Research which is aimed at better under- 
standing and definition of a problem must be 
clearly distinguished from the development of 
clinical tools (aimed at improving hardware or 
software design). It is generally inappropriate to 
evaluate one type of study by the standards one 
would apply to the other. 
(5) Communications between exponents of 
biostereometrics, photogrammetric engineers, 
physical scientists and manufacturers must be 
greatly improved. There is still too much “re- 
inventing of the wheel.” Instrument manufac- 
turers could benefit from using a wider knowl- 
edge base than in-house and local experts can 
provide. 
(6) Most of us yield too often to an unfortunate 
ethno-centricity in attributing the sources of rel- 
evant literature and ideas, which belies the po- 
tential of modern information retrieval systems 
such as are available in libraries around the 
world. American writers tend to quote other 
Americans, the British other British, the Canadi- 
ans other Canadians, the French other French, 
the Germans other Germans, Swedes other 
Swedes, and so on. In the biomedical sciences 
there should be no national knowledge bound- 
aries. 
This writer will continue to do everything 
possible to remove such boundaries (inadver- 
PHOTOGRAMMETRIC ENGINEERING & REMOTE SENSING, 1976 
tent or otherwise). By the time of the Helsinki 
meeting, I hope to complete a supplement to 
the bibliography on biostereometrics com- 
piled for the 1972 ISP meeting in Ottawa. 
Anyone interested can obtain a copy of the 
supplement after the Helsinki meeting by 
writing to the Biostereometrics Laboratory, 
Baylor College of Medicine, 1333 Moursund 
Avenue, Houston, Texas 77025, USA. Con- 
tributions of reprints and other pertinent in- 
formation would be greatly appreciated. 
Before concluding this report, I want to 
express my personal thanks to Dr. H.M. Kar- 
ara, for his indefatigable and always timely 
contributions as symposium coordinator; Dr. 
K. Wong, U.S. Correspondent for ISP Com- 
mission V, for yeoman service on the program 
committee; to V.D. Brandow and J.B. 
Ihenacho, both from the University of Il- 
linois, for supervising the registration proce- 
dures and helping the participants in myriad 
ways with consistent good humor, and to 
Jaime R. Cuzzi, John E. Hugg, Sherry Gille- 
land, Marjorie Gordon, and other staff mem- 
bers of the Biostereometrics Laboratory, 
Baylor College of Medicine, for assistance 
too wide-ranging to recount in detail here. 
I have not been able to do justice to all the 
planners, speakers, exhibitors, program assis- 
tants, and other participants whose contribu- 
tions made the symposium what it was. One 
experienced observer commented that “It 
was as perfect a symposium as I have ever 
experienced.” This remark reflects the un- 
usual spirit of cooperation and enthusiasm 
which prevailed among those involved at all 
stages of the undertaking. It also might help 
to explain why the program chairman and the 
planning committee regard their association 
with this stimulating event as a rare privilege.
	        
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