Smart Medicine Podcast | Prof. Nico Van Den Berg — Computational MRI, AI, and the Future of Image-Guided Therapy
In this episode, I speak with Professor Nico Van Den Berg, Director of the Centre of Image Science at UMC Utrecht and Scientific Co-Lead of the IMAGINE Consortium—one of the leading voices at the intersection of MR physics, computational imaging, and AI-driven clinical translation.
We explore how MRI is evolving from a hardware-driven modality into a computational and intelligent system, and what this means for the future of diagnostics and therapy.
Key topics we discuss:
• From MRI physics to computational imaging
How Nico’s journey shaped his vision for integrating physics, computation, and clinical workflows.
• What “computational imaging” really means in MRI
How reconstruction, acquisition, and processing are being redefined—and where this creates real clinical impact.
• MR-Linac: promise vs reality
Why it’s one of the most advanced technologies in radiation oncology—and why adoption still faces barriers.
• AI and autonomous imaging
What is realistic in the next 5–10 years, where AI is already delivering value today, and the risks of using AI without strong physics grounding.
• Image-guided interventions & the IMAGINE Consortium
The infrastructure and computational challenges behind making advanced interventions scalable and clinically relevant.
• RF engineering, safety, and translation to clinic
Why safety, implants, and system-level understanding remain critical as MRI moves deeper into therapy.
• The future of MRI
Will intelligence reshape hardware, pulse sequences, and workflows? What does this mean for adaptive radiotherapy?
• Advice for the next generation
What young physicists should focus on to stay relevant in an AI-driven era.
This conversation highlights a central theme:
AI alone is not enough—true progress in medical imaging requires deep integration of physics, computation, and clinical insight.
#SmartMedicine #MedicalPhysics #MRI #AIinMedicine #ComputationalImaging #MRLinac #Radiology #RadiationOncology #ImageGuidedTherapy #DigitalHealth