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| - | ===== Compound shapes and polygons ===== | + | ===== Annotations ===== |
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| + | ==== Compound shapes and polygons ==== | ||
| Pathomation is a company created by pathologists… for pathologists (and by extension: everybody else who has any exposure to microscopic image material). We include the standard annotations tools because they’re… well… standard. | Pathomation is a company created by pathologists… for pathologists (and by extension: everybody else who has any exposure to microscopic image material). We include the standard annotations tools because they’re… well… standard. | ||
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| {{:close_freehand.png|}} | {{:close_freehand.png|}} | ||
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| + | ==== Compound Freehand ==== | ||
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| + | Indicating a tumor region needs to be precise. A person’s diagnosis, subsequent treatment, and ultimately survival chance can depend on it. The problem then becomes: how to combine drawing a large area at a high-enough resolution? | ||
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| + | That’s why we have the compound freehand. With that, you can draw the edges of your region of interest in segments. You delineate one border, pan / zoom a bit further into the slide, annotate more, pan / zoom… etcetera until all your segments reasonably mark your target area. Then you click on the finish button, and the individual segments are automatically glued together into a single annotation. | ||
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| + | {{:compound.png?600|}} | ||