biological image
1f50893f80d6830d62765ffad7721742-Reviews.html
First provide a summary of the paper, and then address the following criteria: Quality, clarity, originality and significance. Summary: the authors developed a novel method specifically to address an increasingly important problem in neuroscience and cell biology more generally: extract cell bodies from noisy images. The images demonstrate fruitful results, and the quantitative results demonstrate useful performance, although not at the level of a human expert. It would have been nice to see a quantitative comparison between this method and any other previously proposed method. Clarity: i found the paper to be clear.
- Overview (0.55)
- Research Report > New Finding (0.34)
Extracting regions of interest from biological images with convolutional sparse block coding
Biological tissue is often composed of cells with similar morphologies replicated throughout large volumes and many biological applications rely on the accurate identification of these cells and their locations from image data. Here we develop a generative model that captures the regularities present in images composed of repeating elements of a few different types. Formally, the model can be described as convolutional sparse block coding. For inference we use a variant of convolutional matching pursuit adapted to block-based representations. We extend the K-SVD learning algorithm to subspaces by retaining several principal vectors from the SVD decomposition instead of just one.
VLM4Bio: A Benchmark Dataset to Evaluate Pretrained Vision-Language Models for Trait Discovery from Biological Images
Images are increasingly becoming the currency for documenting biodiversity on the planet, providing novel opportunities for accelerating scientific discoveries in the field of organismal biology, especially with the advent of large vision-language models (VLMs). We ask if pre-trained VLMs can aid scientists in answering a range of biologically relevant questions without any additional fine-tuning. In this paper, we evaluate the effectiveness of 12 state-of-the-art (SOTA) VLMs in the field of organismal biology using a novel dataset, VLM4Bio, consisting of 469K question-answer pairs involving 30K images from three groups of organisms: fishes, birds, and butterflies, covering five biologically relevant tasks. We also explore the effects of applying prompting techniques and tests for reasoning hallucination on the performance of VLMs, shedding new light on the capabilities of current SOTA VLMs in answering biologically relevant questions using images.
Extracting regions of interest from biological images with convolutional sparse block coding Marius Pachitariu, Adam Packer
Biological tissue is often composed of cells with similar morphologies replicated throughout large volumes and many biological applications rely on the accurate identification of these cells and their locations from image data. Here we develop a generative model that captures the regularities present in images composed of repeating elements of a few different types. Formally, the model can be described as convolutional sparse block coding. For inference we use a variant of convolutional matching pursuit adapted to block-based representations. We extend the K-SVD learning algorithm to subspaces by retaining several principal vectors from the SVD decomposition instead of just one. Good models with little cross-talk between subspaces can be obtained by learning the blocks incrementally. We perform extensive experiments on simulated images and the inference algorithm consistently recovers a large proportion of the cells with a small number of false positives. We fit the convolutional model to noisy GCaMP6 two-photon images of spiking neurons and to Nissl-stained slices of cortical tissue and show that it recovers cell body locations without supervision. The flexibility of the block-based representation is reflected in the variability of the recovered cell shapes.
PhenDiff: Revealing Invisible Phenotypes with Conditional Diffusion Models
Bourou, Anis, Boyer, Thomas, Daupin, Kévin, Dubreuil, Véronique, De Thonel, Aurélie, Mezger, Valérie, Genovesio, Auguste
Over the last five years, deep generative models have gradually been adopted for various tasks in biological research. Notably, image-to-image translation methods showed to be effective in revealing subtle phenotypic cell variations otherwise invisible to the human eye. Current methods to achieve this goal mainly rely on Generative Adversarial Networks (GANs). However, these models are known to suffer from some shortcomings such as training instability and mode collapse. Furthermore, the lack of robustness to invert a real image into the latent of a trained GAN prevents flexible editing of real images. In this work, we propose PhenDiff, an image-to-image translation method based on conditional diffusion models to identify subtle phenotypes in microscopy images. We evaluate this approach on biological datasets against previous work such as CycleGAN. We show that PhenDiff outperforms this baseline in terms of quality and diversity of the generated images. We then apply this method to display invisible phenotypic changes triggered by a rare neurodevelopmental disorder on microscopy images of organoids. Altogether, we demonstrate that PhenDiff is able to perform high quality biological image-to-image translation allowing to spot subtle phenotype variations on a real image.
Extracting regions of interest from biological images with convolutional sparse block coding
Biological tissue is often composed of cells with similar morphologies replicated throughout large volumes and many biological applications rely on the accurate identification of these cells and their locations from image data. Here we develop a generative model that captures the regularities present in images composed of repeating elements of a few different types. Formally, the model can be described as convolutional sparse block coding. For inference we use a variant of convolutional matching pursuit adapted to block-based representations. We extend the K-SVD learning algorithm to subspaces by retaining several principal vectors from the SVD decomposition instead of just one.
New algorithm to help process biological images
IMAGE: At train-time, we embed each pixel of the ground truth image SI as the mean of predefined guide functions f over instance pixels it belongs to, resuling in embeddings e(S,... view more Skoltech researchers have presented a new biological image processing method that accurately picks out specific biological objects in complex images. Their results will be presented as an oral talk at the high-profile computer vision conference, CVPR 2020. Biologists get a wealth of information in the form of biological images, which makes their automatic processing a formidable task. Researchers often have to handle images with a large number of objects, which is especially hard when it comes to microscopy images with overlapping objects and poor image quality and sharpness. Machine Learning (ML) helps train the computer to process biological images, making data analysis much faster, more accurate and consistent across experiments.
Extracting regions of interest from biological images with convolutional sparse block coding
Pachitariu, Marius, Packer, Adam M., Pettit, Noah, Dalgleish, Henry, Hausser, Michael, Sahani, Maneesh
Biological tissue is often composed of cells with similar morphologies replicated throughout large volumes and many biological applications rely on the accurate identification of these cells and their locations from image data. Here we develop a generative model that captures the regularities present in images composed of repeating elements of a few different types. Formally, the model can be described as convolutional sparse block coding. For inference we use a variant of convolutional matching pursuit adapted to block-based representations. We extend the K-SVD learning algorithm to subspaces by retaining several principal vectors from the SVD decomposition instead of just one.
Extracting regions of interest from biological images with convolutional sparse block coding
Pachitariu, Marius, Packer, Adam M., Pettit, Noah, Dalgleish, Henry, Hausser, Michael, Sahani, Maneesh
Biological tissue is often composed of cells with similar morphologies replicated throughout large volumes and many biological applications rely on the accurate identification of these cells and their locations from image data. Here we develop a generative model that captures the regularities present in images composed of repeating elements of a few different types. Formally, the model can be described as convolutional sparse block coding. For inference we use a variant of convolutional matching pursuit adapted to block-based representations. We extend the K-SVD learning algorithm to subspaces by retaining several principal vectors from the SVD decomposition instead of just one. Good models with little cross-talk between subspaces can be obtained by learning the blocks incrementally. We perform extensive experiments on simulated images and the inference algorithm consistently recovers a large proportion of the cells with a small number of false positives. We fit the convolutional model to noisy GCaMP6 two-photon images of spiking neurons and to Nissl-stained slices of cortical tissue and show that it recovers cell body locations without supervision. The flexibility of the block-based representation is reflected in the variability of the recovered cell shapes.