Date: Thu, 28 Mar 2024 09:09:31 -0400 (EDT) Message-ID: <343260807.692.1711631371345@ip-10-208-27-219.ec2.internal> Subject: Exported From Confluence MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: multipart/related; boundary="----=_Part_691_1027957971.1711631371343" ------=_Part_691_1027957971.1711631371343 Content-Type: text/html; charset=UTF-8 Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable Content-Location: file:///C:/exported.html
The ATB allows you to generate a set of well-defined questions a= nd answer choices to facilitate collecting information for a particular pur= pose, such as The Cancer Genome Atlas Glioblastoma (TCGA GBM) study. These = questions and answers are contained in an AIM XML template file that you ca= n import into an AIM-enabled application, such as NCI's implementation of A= IM on the ClearCanvas open source workstation. Aided by the information in = the XML file, users of the AIM-enabled application can then annotate medica= l images using a controlled vocabulary and standard template. This results = in simple and constrained annotations that are reproducible and consistent.= The AIM-enabled application captures answers and exports them as an AIM XM= L document or AIM Digital Imaging and Communications in Medicine (DICOM) St= ructured Reporting (SR) document. Users can then send the document to the A= IM Data Service or DICOM storage Service Class Provider (SCP), respectively= .
You use the ATB to design templates based on lexicons of standard and us= er-definable terms. You add anatomic entities, imaging observations, infere= nces, calculations, and markups as components to a template. Adding tags to= a template helps you make them easier to find. You combine multiple templa= tes into template groups.
You can search for shared templates and template groups using the AIM Te= mplate Service and then modify them in the ATB.
AIM templates are based on the AIM template XML schema:
Version 1, r=
evision 18
Version 1, revision 23
The AIM template XML schemas are based on the AIM 3.0 model.