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Mark Griffin |
I am working
in medical image processing at the Centre for Magnetic Resonance, at UQ.
I used
to wonder about mathematics and my future. Now I realise my work may
save a person’s life - that says a lot about the crucial nature of mathematics.
I graduated
from The University of Queensland with degrees in engineering and mathematics
and finished with a PhD in mathematical research. Initially I was concerned
that if I followed mathematics, I’d end up working in a field that was totally
separate from the ‘real world’, but now I see these concerns as naive.
Currently,
I’m working at UQ’s Centre for Magnetic Resonance. Two exciting projects
I am involved in are the study of stroke patients, where we use Magnetic
Resonance Images (MRI) and statistical mixture modelling to predict the
progress of the patient, and a cardiac project, where MRIs are taken of
the patient’s beating heart, and from these we construct models to assess
heart strain.
I am privileged
to see mathematics in the work of doctors, psychologists, physicists and
engineers here at the Centre. I see now that mathematics is fundamental
to a pursuit of all of these careers.
Maths is
beautifully simple when you look at the patterns it produces. But it’s more
than just a nice brainteaser. I can meet the patients whose images I have
displayed on my computer screen and know that the work I am currently doing
may save that person’s life.