4 research outputs found
Three-Dimensional GPU-Accelerated Active Contours for Automated Localization of Cells in Large Images
Cell segmentation in microscopy is a challenging problem, since cells are
often asymmetric and densely packed. This becomes particularly challenging for
extremely large images, since manual intervention and processing time can make
segmentation intractable. In this paper, we present an efficient and highly
parallel formulation for symmetric three-dimensional (3D) contour evolution
that extends previous work on fast two-dimensional active contours. We provide
a formulation for optimization on 3D images, as well as a strategy for
accelerating computation on consumer graphics hardware. The proposed software
takes advantage of Monte-Carlo sampling schemes in order to speed up
convergence and reduce thread divergence. Experimental results show that this
method provides superior performance for large 2D and 3D cell segmentation
tasks when compared to existing methods on large 3D brain images
Robust Cell Detection for Large-Scale 3D Microscopy Using GPU-Accelerated Iterative Voting
High-throughput imaging techniques, such as Knife-Edge Scanning Microscopy (KESM),are capable of acquiring three-dimensional whole-organ images at sub-micrometer resolution. These images are challenging to segment since they can exceed several terabytes (TB) in size, requiring extremely fast and fully automated algorithms. Staining techniques are limited to contrast agents that can be applied to large samples and imaged in a single pass. This requires maximizing the number of structures labeled in a single channel, resulting in images that are densely packed with spatial features. In this paper, we propose a three-dimensional approach for locating cells based on iterative voting. Due to the computational complexity of this algorithm, a highly efficient GPU implementation is required to make it practical on large data sets. The proposed algorithm has a limited number of input parameters and is highly parallel
Presentation_1_Robust Cell Detection for Large-Scale 3D Microscopy Using GPU-Accelerated Iterative Voting.PDF
<p>High-throughput imaging techniques, such as Knife-Edge Scanning Microscopy (KESM),are capable of acquiring three-dimensional whole-organ images at sub-micrometer resolution. These images are challenging to segment since they can exceed several terabytes (TB) in size, requiring extremely fast and fully automated algorithms. Staining techniques are limited to contrast agents that can be applied to large samples and imaged in a single pass. This requires maximizing the number of structures labeled in a single channel, resulting in images that are densely packed with spatial features. In this paper, we propose a three-dimensional approach for locating cells based on iterative voting. Due to the computational complexity of this algorithm, a highly efficient GPU implementation is required to make it practical on large data sets. The proposed algorithm has a limited number of input parameters and is highly parallel.</p