3D Print Your Brain Using brain2print.org!
brain2print.org uses many different tools to generate a 3d printing file of your brain, including BrainChop AI models, niimath, niivue, and ITK-Wasm (https://github.com/niivue/brain2print). Developed by Chris Rorden and colleagues, this allows you to simply drag and drop a NIfTI file into the web page and generate a 3d-printer mesh within a couple of minutes. Your data remains private and is not shared with any external servers. If you do not have a NIfTI file yet, but you do have the raw DICOM files, you can convert your DICOM files to NIfTI using this website: https://niivue.github.io/niivue-dcm2niix/. Link to the original brain2print paper published in Nature Scientific Reports: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-025-00014-5?utm_source=rct_congratemailt&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=oa_20250505&utm_content=10.1038/s41598-025-00014-5 Table of Contents ============== 0:00 Introduction to brain2print 1:17 Converting DICOM files to NIfTI 2:21 Using brain2print to segment the brain 3:44 Creating the STL mesh file for 3d printing 5:43 3d printing my brain at University of Michigan's Design Lab Workshop at the Shapiro Library 7:25 Summary
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