Systems, methods, and probes are provided for 
functional imaging by radioactive-emission-measurements, specific to body structures, such as the 
prostate, the 
esophagus, the 
cervix, the 
uterus, the ovaries, the heart, the breast, the brain, and the 
whole body, and other body structures. The 
nuclear imaging may be performed alone, or together with 
structural imaging, for example, by x-rays, 
ultrasound, or MRI. Preferably, the radioactive-emission-measuring probes include detectors, which are adapted for individual motions with respect to the probe housings, to generate views from different orientations and to change their view orientations. These motions are optimized with respect to functional information gained about the body structure, by identifying preferred sets of views for measurements, based on models of the body structures and information theoretic measures. A second iteration, for identifying preferred sets of views for measurements of a portion of a body structure, based on models of a location of a 
pathology that has been identified, makes it possible, in effect, to 
zoom in on a suspected 
pathology. The systems are preprogrammed to provide these motions automatically.