About VOXEL-MAN

First ever 3D reconstruction of a brain from MRIVOXEL-MAN is a pioneer in medical visualization and simulation technology. The VOXEL-MAN project dates back to around 1984, when a research group headed by Professor Karl Heinz Höhne at the University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf made their first experiments on 3D rendering of tomographic images from CT and MRI. At RSNA 1987, the first ever in vivo images of a complete human brain could be presented.

Muscles of the torso of the Visible HumanIn the 1990s, a new kind of interactively explorable virtual body model was developed, which integrates spatial and descriptive knowledge of human anatomy, function, and radiological appearance. This framework proved a perfect match for the highly realistic, full color 3D renderings created from the Visible Human in the second half of the decade. Among others, these works led to the anatomy atlases VOXEL-MAN 3D-Navigator: Brain and SkullInner Organs and Upper Limb (all published by Springer-Verlag) and EUS meets VOXEL-MAN, a training system for endoscopic ultrasound (published by Hitachi Medical Systems). Applications outside the medical domain include the Virtual Mummy and the Visible Animal Project. These projects are presented in the gallery.

Training session at the Voxel-Man TempoSurg surgical simulator (2005)Around 2000, experiments with the newly available haptic devices showed their potential for medical applications. In close cooperation with clinical partners, a first prototype of a virtual ear surgery simulator for temporal bone dissection was developed, which combines unsurpassed visual realism and haptic feedback. In 2005, the VOXEL-MAN Group was established and the VOXEL-MAN TempoSurg simulator was introduced to the market.

simulator sessionIn 2009, the VOXEL-MAN Group received an EXIST-Forschungstransfer grant from the Federal Ministry of Economics and Technology (BMWi) for the development of a dental simulator. Its innovative software architecture provides the common platform for all VOXEL-MAN training simulators. In 2011, the second generation of the temporal bone drilling simulator called VOXEL-MAN Tempo and the tooth preparation simulator VOXEL-MAN Dental were presented, later followed by VOXEL-MAN My Cases for importing clinical cases from CT into the simulator and VOXEL-MAN Sinus for endoscopic sinus surgery.

Today, VOXEL-MAN surgical simulators are used by leading universities and hospitals around the world, from Honululu in the west to Tokyo in the east and from Bergen in the north to Porto Alegre in the south. The growing interest in our simulators is also reflected by a considerable number of independent validation studies.

About our name

Similar to a picture element or pixel in a two-dimensional image, a volume element or voxel is the elementary component of a digital representation of a three-dimensional object. You can think of it as a very small cube. The name VOXEL-MAN was already used for the first applications and possibly inspired by electronic gadgets. It refers to the digital representation of the human body.