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Sudhir Ramanna Phones & Addresses

  • Saint Paul, MN
  • Cary, NC
  • Redmond, WA
  • 385 Murphy Ave, Sebastopol, CA 95472 (707) 824-1568
  • Santa Rosa, CA
  • Tucson, AZ

Resumes

Resumes

Sudhir Ramanna Photo 1

Research Staff At University Of Minnesota

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Location:
229 19Th Ave south, Minneapolis, MN 55455
Industry:
Research
Work:
Ge Healthcare Feb 2010 - Oct 2014
System Specialist

University of Minnesota Feb 2010 - Oct 2014
Research Staff at University of Minnesota

Advanced Mri Technologies Jan 2006 - Jan 2010
Research Scientist

Honeywell Jul 2002 - Dec 2003
Software Engineer
Education:
University of Arizona 2004 - 2005
Masters, Computer Engineering
National Institute of Technology Karnataka 1998 - 2002
Bachelors, Communication, Engineering, Electronics
Skills:
Pulse Sequence Programming on Ge and Siemens Systems
Expertise on Ge and Siemens Scanners
Matlab
C
C++
Algorithms
Image Processing
Research
Software Development
Signal Processing
R&D
Simulations
Engineering
Safe Patient Handling
Medical Imaging
Interests:
Social Services
Languages:
English
Kannada
Hindi
Tamil
Sudhir Ramanna Photo 2

Sudhir Ramanna

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Publications

Us Patents

Arterial Spin Labeled, Segmented, Interleaved 3D Grase Mri

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US Patent:
20090212773, Aug 27, 2009
Filed:
Feb 19, 2009
Appl. No.:
12/389204
Inventors:
David A. Feinberg - Bodega CA, US
Sudhir Ramanna - Sebastopol CA, US
Assignee:
ADVANCED MRI TECHNOLOGIES, LLC - Sebastapol CA
International Classification:
G01R 33/54
US Classification:
324309
Abstract:
A magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) method of obtaining MRI images of a patient and storing the images in physical storage media.

Efficient Multi-Shot Epi With Self-Navigated Segmentation

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US Patent:
20200337588, Oct 29, 2020
Filed:
Apr 27, 2020
Appl. No.:
16/858926
Inventors:
- Minneapolis MN, US
Sudhir Ramanna - Minneapolis MN, US
Mehmet Akcakaya - Minneapolis MN, US
International Classification:
A61B 5/055
G01R 33/46
G01R 33/56
G01R 33/561
G01R 33/36
G01R 33/48
Abstract:
Magnetic resonance imaging (“MRI”) data are corrected from corruptions due to physiological changes using a self-navigated phase correction technique. Unlike motion correction techniques, the effects of physiological changes (e.g., breathing and respiration) are corrected by making the MRI data self-consistent relative to an absolute uncorrupted phase reference. This phase correction information can be extracted from the acquisition itself, thereby eliminating the need for a separate navigator scan, and establishing an accelerated acquisition. This absolute reference can be computed in a data segmented space, and the subsequent data can be corrected relative to this absolute reference with low-resolution phases.
Sudhir Ramanna from Saint Paul, MN, age ~43 Get Report