Clinical trials Below are current clinical trials.1 studies in Cleft and Craniofacial Clinic (open studies only). Filter this list of studies by location, status and more. Diagnosing Craniosynostosis MR with Facial Recognition Software Rochester, Minn. The purpose of this study is to use photographs of infants, both normal and diagnosed with Craniosynostosis, to train a facial recognition algorithm to identify craniosynostosis before evaluation by a healthcare professional. Request an appointment Doctors by location and specialtyResearch Nov. 12, 2024 Share on: FacebookTwitter Cleft and Craniofacial ClinicSectionsRequest an appointmentOverviewTests & proceduresConditions treatedDoctorsDoctors by location and specialtyClinical trialsResearchCosts & insuranceReferrals Research: It's all about patients Show transcript for video Research: It's all about patients [MUSIC PLAYING] Joseph Sirven, M.D., Professor of Neurology, Mayo Clinic: Mayo's mission is about the patient. The patient comes first. So the mission and research here is to advance how we can best help the patient, how to make sure the patient comes first in care. So in many ways, it's a cycle. It can start with as simple as an idea worked on in a laboratory, brought to the patient bedside, and if everything goes right — and let's say it's helpful or beneficial — then brought on as a standard approach. And I think that is one of the unique characteristics of Mayo's approach to research — that patient-centeredness — that really helps to put it in its own spotlight. SectionsRequest an appointmentOverviewTests & proceduresConditions treatedDoctorsClinical trialsResearchCosts & insuranceReferrals ORG-20511067 Medical Departments & Centers Cleft and Craniofacial Clinic