530 research outputs found

    Nuclei Segmentation of Fluorescence Microscopy Images Using Three Dimensional Convolutional Neural Networks

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    Fluorescence microscopy enables one to visualize subcellular structures of living tissue or cells in three dimensions. This is especially true for two-photon microscopy using near-infrared light which can image deeper into tissue. To characterize and analyze biological structures, nuclei segmentation is a prerequisite step. Due to the complexity and size of the image data sets, manual segmentation is prohibitive. This paper describes a fully 3D nuclei segmentation method using three dimensional convolutional neural networks. To train the network, synthetic volumes with corresponding labeled volumes are automatically generated. Our results from multiple data sets demonstrate that our method can successfully segment nuclei in 3D

    Nucleus segmentation : towards automated solutions

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    Single nucleus segmentation is a frequent challenge of microscopy image processing, since it is the first step of many quantitative data analysis pipelines. The quality of tracking single cells, extracting features or classifying cellular phenotypes strongly depends on segmentation accuracy. Worldwide competitions have been held, aiming to improve segmentation, and recent years have definitely brought significant improvements: large annotated datasets are now freely available, several 2D segmentation strategies have been extended to 3D, and deep learning approaches have increased accuracy. However, even today, no generally accepted solution and benchmarking platform exist. We review the most recent single-cell segmentation tools, and provide an interactive method browser to select the most appropriate solution.Peer reviewe

    Nuclei counting in microscopy images with three dimensional generative adversarial networks

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    Microscopy image analysis can provide substantial information for clinical study and understanding of biological structures. Two-photon microscopy is a type of fluorescence microscopy that can image deep into tissue with near-infrared excitation light. We are interested in methods that can detect and characterize nuclei in 3D fluorescence microscopy image volumes. In general, several challenges exist for counting nuclei in 3D image volumes. These include “crowding” and touching of nuclei, overlapping of nuclei, and shape and size variances of the nuclei. In this paper, a 3D nuclei counter using two different generative adversarial networks (GAN) is proposed and evaluated. Synthetic data that resembles real microscopy image is generated with a GAN and used to train another 3D GAN that counts the number of nuclei. Our approach is evaluated with respect to the number of groundtruth nuclei and compared with common ways of counting used in the biological research. Fluorescence microscopy 3D image volumes of rat kidneys are used to test our 3D nuclei counter. The accuracy results of proposed nuclei counter are compared with the ImageJ’s 3D object counter (JACoP) and the 3D watershed. Both the counting accuracy and the object-based evaluation show that the proposed technique is successful for counting nuclei in 3D
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