Inventor · Greenlawn, NY, US

Mark R. Wax

15Patents
13h-index
17Co-inventors
71Inventor score

Filing activity: Sep 16, 1996 → Dec 20, 2006

Most-cited inventions

PatentTitleAreaCited byStatus
US5971767A System and method for performing a three-dimensional virtual examination Physics 225 Expired
US7356367B2 Computer aided treatment planning and visualization with image registration and fusion Human Necessities 204 Expired
US6331116A System and method for performing a three-dimensional virtual segmentation and examination Physics 135 Expired
US6343936B1 System and method for performing a three-dimensional virtual examination, navigation and visualization Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 114 Expired
US7474776B2 System and method for performing a three-dimensional virtual examination of objects, such as internal organs Physics 108 Active
US6514082B2 System and method for performing a three-dimensional examination with collapse correction Physics 101 Expired
US7324104B1 Method of centerline generation in virtual objects Physics 84 Expired
US7194117B2 System and method for performing a three-dimensional virtual examination of objects, such as internal organs Physics 79 Expired
US7630750B2 Computer aided treatment planning Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 61 Expired
US7706600B2 Enhanced virtual navigation and examination Physics 25 Expired
US7148887B2 System and method for performing a three-dimensional virtual segmentation and examination with optical texture mapping Physics 23 Expired
US7486811B2 System and method for performing a three-dimensional virtual examination of objects, such as internal organs Physics 21 Active
US7477768B2 System and method for performing a three-dimensional virtual examination of objects, such as internal organs Physics 17 Active
US7574024B2 Centerline and tree branch skeleton determination for virtual objects Physics 13 Expired
US7596256B1 Computer assisted detection of lesions in volumetric medical images Physics 8 Active

Source: USPTO / EPO open patent data. Inventor disambiguation is heuristic; counts are objective bibliographic measures.