Seidel, JürgenVaquero López, Juan JoséPascau González-Garzón, JavierDesco Menéndez, ManuelJohnson, Calvin A.Green, Michael V.2011-09-272011-09-2720022002 IEEE International Symposium On Biomedical Imaging Proceedings, 2002, p. 545-5480-7803-7584-Xhttps://hdl.handle.net/10016/12189Proceeding of: 2002 IEEE International Symposium On Biomedical Imaging, Washington, D.C., USA, July 7-10, 2002ATLAS (Advanced Technology Laboratory Animal Scanner), a small animal PET scanner designed to image animals the size of rats and mice, is about to enter service on the NIH campus in Bethesda, Maryland. This system is the first small animal PET scanner with a depth-ofinteraction capability and the first to use iterative resolution recovery algorithms, rather than conventional filtered back projection, for "production" image reconstruction. ATLAS is also proximate to, and co-axial with, a high resolution small animal CT scanner. When fully integrated, spatially registered PET and CT images of each animal will be used to correct the emission data for radiation attenuation and to aid in target identification. In this report we describe some of the technical and functional features of this system and illustrate how these features are used in an actual small animal imaging studyapplication/pdfeng© IEEEFeatures of the NIH atlas small animal pet scanner and its use with a coaxial small animal volume CT scannerconference paperBiología y Biomedicina10.1109/ISBI.2002.1029315open access5455482002 IEEE International Symposium On Biomedical Imaging Proceedings