Breast MR has rapidly become a useful adjunct imaging technique in the detection of breast cancer. As a result of mainstream media coverage, consumer awareness and demand for breast MR services has increased. For the MR technologist, breast imaging poses unique challenges related to balancing temporal and spatial resolution. Use of dedicated equipment and sequence add-ons like parallel imaging and fat suppression are integral to the successful breast MR program. A printable download will be
e-mailed to each registrant prior to the first session of the webinar. This will allow you to follow along with the presentation and make
notes as you feel necessary. This webinar will be presented in one two-hour session.
Breast MRI for the Technologist
Jun 2nd, 2009
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![A normal mammogram confirmed by three-year radiologic follow-up illustrates reader-marked regions of interest (ROIs) during (A) unaided (round 1) and (B) artificial intelligence (AI)–assisted (round 2) reading. Each colored dot represents an ROI for recall by a human reader. Readers could mark more than one ROI per case, represented by multiple dots of the same color. During AI-assisted reading, the AI system displayed three visible prompts: two with suspicion of malignancy scores of 35% (left mediolateral oblique [L MLO] and craniocaudal [L CC]) and one with a suspicion of malignancy score of 10% (right craniocaudal [R CC]), shown as polygonal overlays. Without AI, six of 10 readers (60%) marked a false-positive ROI. With AI assistance, this fell to two of 10 (20%). R MLO = right mediolateral oblique.](https://img.auntminnie.com/mindful/smg/workspaces/default/uploads/2026/07/2026-07-14-radiology-mammogram-ai-auto-bias.H0bYO8QlWs.jpg?auto=format%2Ccompress&fit=crop&h=112&q=70&w=112)




