Prof. Brian W. Pogue
Professor & Chair at Univ of Wisconsin-Madison
SPIE Involvement:
Board of Editors | Conference Program Committee | Conference Co-Chair | Conference Chair | Editor-in-Chief: Journal of Biomedical Optics | Editorial Board Member: Biophotonics Discovery | Editor | Author | Instructor | Student Chapter Advisor | Special Event Speaker
Area of Expertise:
radiation therapy imaging , fluorescence in vivo , photodynamic therapy , molecular guided surgery , surgical guidance , diffuse imaging
Websites:
Profile Summary

Brian W. Pogue, Ph.D. is the MacLean Professor of Engineering at Dartmouth in Hanover, New Hampshire USA, and is Adjunct Professor of Surgery in the Geisel School of Medicine. His Bachelor’s and Master’s degrees are in Physics, with Ph.D. in Medical/Nuclear Physics from McMaster University, Canada. He was Research Fellow at the Wellman Center for Photomedicine, Mass. General Hospital, Harvard Medical School. At Dartmouth since 1996, he works in the general area of Optics in Medicine, with a focus on novel imaging systems for characterizing cancer and tracking therapy. He was Dean of Graduate Studies at Dartmouth from 2008-2012 and is now Director of MS and PhD Programs in Engineering Science & Medical Physics. He has published over 350 peer-reviewed papers and >400 conference papers in cancer therapy, surgery, medicine, medical oncology, and radiotherapy. His research is funded by the National Cancer Institute through two Program Project grants as well as several individual R01 grants. He is the Editor-in-Chief of the Journal of Biomedical Optics published by SPIE and is a Fellow of the Optical Society of America (OSA), the American Institute of Medical and Biological Engineers (AIMBE) and the International Society of Optics & Photonics (SPIE). He recently founded the startup company DoseOptics LLC, making the world’s first camera to image radiotherapy dose delivery as it happens.
Publications (391)

Proceedings Article | 13 March 2024 Presentation + Paper
Simin Belali, Marien Iliza Ochoa Mendoza, Matthew Reed, Annemarie Lang, Joel Boerckel, Brian Pogue, Sergei Vinogradov
Proceedings Volume 12862, 1286204 (2024) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.3001102
KEYWORDS: Oxygen, Hydrogels, Dendrimers, Phosphorescence, Luminescence, Pulse signals, Tissues, Quenching, Medicine, Matrices

Proceedings Article | 13 March 2024 Presentation
Proceedings Volume PC12825, PC1282501 (2024) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.3012664
KEYWORDS: Medical imaging, Resection, Visualization, Tumors, Tissues, Surgery, Solids, Skin, Quenching, Proteins

Proceedings Article | 13 March 2024 Poster
Helen Zhang, Philip Cheney, Stephan Kanick, Hanh Le, David McClatchy, Nian Liu, John Lu, Tae Joon Cho, Kimberly Briggman, David Allen, Wendy Wells, Brian Pogue, Jeeseong Hwang
Proceedings Volume PC12833, PC128330M (2024) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.3023601

Proceedings Article | 13 March 2024 Presentation
Proceedings Volume PC12816, PC1281606 (2024) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.3004512
KEYWORDS: Tissues, Skin, Hypoxia, Fluorescence, Dermatology, Tumors, Surgery, Sensors, Resolution enhancement technologies, Reflection

Proceedings Article | 13 March 2024 Presentation
Proceedings Volume PC12823, PC1282309 (2024) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.3004506
KEYWORDS: Oxygen, In vivo imaging, Calibration, Fluorescence, Quenching, Photodynamic therapy, Molecules, Electrodes, Tissues, Radiotherapy

Showing 5 of 391 publications
Proceedings Volume Editor (14)

SPIE Conference Volume | 20 June 2022

Showing 5 of 14 publications
Conference Committee Involvement (74)
Molecular-Guided Surgery: Molecules, Devices, and Applications XI
25 January 2025 | San Francisco, California, United States
Biomedical Light Scattering XV
25 January 2025 | San Francisco, California, United States
Clinical Biophotonics III
7 April 2024 | Strasbourg, France
Molecular-Guided Surgery: Molecules, Devices, and Applications X
27 January 2024 | San Francisco, California, United States
Multimodal Biomedical Imaging XIX
27 January 2024 | San Francisco, California, United States
Showing 5 of 74 Conference Committees
Course Instructor
SC1088: Image-guided Tissue Spectroscopy and Image Reconstruction using NIRFAST: A hands-on course
This course will teach near-infrared light propagation modeling and image reconstruction in tissue using the freely distributed NIRFAST software package. NIRFAST is a widely-used, user-friendly package for modeling NIR light propagation in tissue and recovering images of optical parameters in arbitrarily-shaped tissue volumes. This course will use a combination of instructor lecturing and hands-on exercises to teach both conceptual and practical aspects of NIR imaging using the software. Attendees will be running and visualizing light propagation models within minutes and will also practice using image reconstruction algorithms for volumetric imaging of functional parameters such as hemoglobin concentration, oxygen saturation, water content, scattering parameters, as well as fluorescence and bioluminescence activity. The class will review the basic physics and biology of the approach, step through how the software works, and train attendees how to use the software through user exercises. More information about NIRFAST can be found at <a href="http://www.nirfast.org">http://www.nirfast.org</a>
SC824: Diffuse Light Transport in Tissue and Diffuse Tomography Reconstruction using MATLAB
This course teaches how to model light propagation with finite element programming, utilizing the easy-to-use style of MATLAB. The NIRFAST shareware software package developed at Dartmouth College (freely distributed for academic research) is used as the backbone to start modeling within the first few minutes of the course. The software incorporates image reconstruction algorithms which work for most diffuse tomography applications, and geometries. The class will review the basic physics of the approach, step through how the software works, and the visualization capabilities of the package will be explored for a number of geometries. Image reconstruction from multispectral data is demonstrated and image reconstruction from luminescent sources is also demonstrated.
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