8 research outputs found
Synaptic Cleft Segmentation in Non-Isotropic Volume Electron Microscopy of the Complete Drosophila Brain
Neural circuit reconstruction at single synapse resolution is increasingly
recognized as crucially important to decipher the function of biological
nervous systems. Volume electron microscopy in serial transmission or scanning
mode has been demonstrated to provide the necessary resolution to segment or
trace all neurites and to annotate all synaptic connections.
Automatic annotation of synaptic connections has been done successfully in
near isotropic electron microscopy of vertebrate model organisms. Results on
non-isotropic data in insect models, however, are not yet on par with human
annotation.
We designed a new 3D-U-Net architecture to optimally represent isotropic
fields of view in non-isotropic data. We used regression on a signed distance
transform of manually annotated synaptic clefts of the CREMI challenge dataset
to train this model and observed significant improvement over the state of the
art.
We developed open source software for optimized parallel prediction on very
large volumetric datasets and applied our model to predict synaptic clefts in a
50 tera-voxels dataset of the complete Drosophila brain. Our model generalizes
well to areas far away from where training data was available
Understanding the retinal basis of vision across species
The vertebrate retina first evolved some 500 million years ago in ancestral marine chordates. Since then, the eyes of different species have been tuned to best support their unique visuoecological lifestyles. Visual specializations in eye designs, large-scale inhomogeneities across the retinal surface and local circuit motifs mean that all species' retinas are unique. Computational theories, such as the efficient coding hypothesis, have come a long way towards an explanation of the basic features of retinal organization and function; however, they cannot explain the full extent of retinal diversity within and across species. To build a truly general understanding of vertebrate vision and the retina's computational purpose, it is therefore important to more quantitatively relate different species' retinal functions to their specific natural environments and behavioural requirements. Ultimately, the goal of such efforts should be to build up to a more general theory of vision
Synaptic cleft segmentation in non-isotropic volume electron microscopy of the complete drosophila brain
Trabajo presentado en la 21st International Conference Medical Image Computing and Computer Assisted Intervention, celebrada en Granada, del 16 al 20 de septiembre de 2018Neural circuit reconstruction at single synapse resolution is increasingly recognized as crucially important to decipher the function of biological nervous systems. Volume electron microscopy in serial transmission or scanning mode has been demonstrated to provide the necessary resolution to segment or trace all neurites and to annotate all synaptic connections.
Automatic annotation of synaptic connections has been done successfully in near isotropic electron microscopy of vertebrate model organisms. Results on non-isotropic data in insect models, however, are not yet on par with human annotation.
We designed a new 3D-U-Net architecture to optimally represent isotropic fields of view in non-isotropic data. We used regression on a signed distance transform of manually annotated synaptic clefts of the CREMI challenge dataset to train this model and observed significant improvement over the state of the art.
We developed open source software for optimized parallel prediction on very large volumetric datasets and applied our model to predict synaptic clefts in a 50 tera-voxels dataset of the complete Drosophila brain. Our model generalizes well to areas far away from where training data was available.Peer reviewe