Biomedical Imaging Group
Logo EPFL
    • Splines Tutorials
    • Splines Art Gallery
    • Wavelets Tutorials
    • Image denoising
    • ERC project: FUN-SP
    • Sparse Processes - Book Preview
    • ERC project: GlobalBioIm
    • The colored revolution of bioimaging
    • Deconvolution
    • SMLM
    • One-World Seminars: Representer theorems
    • A Unifying Representer Theorem
Follow us on Twitter.
Join our Github.
Masquer le formulaire de recherche
Menu
BIOMEDICAL IMAGING GROUP (BIG)
Laboratoire d'imagerie biomédicale (LIB)
  1. School of Engineering STI
  2. Institute IEM
  3.  LIB
  4.  Particle Tracking
  • Laboratory
    • Laboratory
    • Laboratory
    • People
    • Jobs and Trainees
    • News
    • Events
    • Seminars
    • Resources (intranet)
    • Twitter
  • Research
    • Research
    • Researchs
    • Research Topics
    • Talks, Tutorials, and Reviews
  • Publications
    • Publications
    • Publications
    • Database of Publications
    • Talks, Tutorials, and Reviews
    • EPFL Infoscience
  • Code
    • Code
    • Code
    • Demos
    • Download Algorithms
    • Github
  • Teaching
    • Teaching
    • Teaching
    • Courses
    • Student projects
  • Splines
    • Teaching
    • Teaching
    • Splines Tutorials
    • Splines Art Gallery
    • Wavelets Tutorials
    • Image denoising
  • Sparsity
    • Teaching
    • Teaching
    • ERC project: FUN-SP
    • Sparse Processes - Book Preview
  • Imaging
    • Teaching
    • Teaching
    • ERC project: GlobalBioIm
    • The colored revolution of bioimaging
    • Deconvolution
    • SMLM
  • Machine Learning
    • Teaching
    • Teaching
    • One-World Seminars: Representer theorems
    • A Unifying Representer Theorem

Automatic Tracking of Particles in Dynamic Fluorescence Microscopy

D. Sage, F. Hediger, S.M. Gasser, M. Unser

Proceedings of the Third International Symposium on Image and Signal Processing and Analysis (ISPA'03), Rome, Italian Republic, September 18-20, 2003, pp. I.582-I.586.


We present a new, robust algorithm for tracking fluorescent particles in dynamic image sequences obtained by brightfield or confocal microscopy. Specifically, we consider the problem of extracting the movement of chromosomal telomeres within the nucleus of a budding yeast cell. Our method has three components. The first is an alignment module that compensates for the movement of the biological structure under investigation. In our application, the images are aligned to the center of gravity of the nucleus which is detected by thresholding and fitted with an ellipse. The second step is a Mexican-hat filtering which we show to be optimally tailored to the detection of a Gaussian-like spot in fractal noise. The final component is a tracking algorithm that uses dynamic programming to extract the optimal (x, y, t) trajectory of a particle.

We have implemented the method as a Java Plugin for the public-domain ImageJ software. We have applied it to real data and have obtained results that are as good—if not better—as manual tracings. Our new algorithm reduces the analysis time of a 300 image sequence from 10 minutes, when it is done manually, to just a few seconds and offers the benefit of reproducibility.

@INPROCEEDINGS(http://bigwww.epfl.ch/publications/sage0301.html,
AUTHOR="Sage, D. and Hediger, F. and Gasser, S.M. and Unser, M.",
TITLE="Automatic Tracking of Particles in Dynamic Fluorescence
	Microscopy",
BOOKTITLE="Proceedings of the Third International Symposium on Image
	and Signal Processing and Analysis ({ISPA'03})",
YEAR="2003",
editor="Lon{\v{c}}ari{\'{c}}, S. and Neri, A. and Babi{\'{c}}, H.",
volume="{I}",
series="",
pages="582--586",
address="Rome, Italian Republic",
month="September 18-20,",
organization="",
publisher="",
note="")

© 2003 EURASIP. Personal use of this material is permitted. However, permission to reprint/republish this material for advertising or promotional purposes or for creating new collective works for resale or redistribution to servers or lists, or to reuse any copyrighted component of this work in other works must be obtained from EURASIP. This material is presented to ensure timely dissemination of scholarly and technical work. Copyright and all rights therein are retained by authors or by other copyright holders. All persons copying this information are expected to adhere to the terms and constraints invoked by each author's copyright. In most cases, these works may not be reposted without the explicit permission of the copyright holder.
  • Laboratory
  • Research
  • Publications
    • Database of Publications
    • Talks, Tutorials, and Reviews
    • EPFL Infoscience
  • Code
  • Teaching
Logo EPFL, Ecole polytechnique fédérale de Lausanne
Emergencies: +41 21 693 3000 Services and resources Contact Map Webmaster email

Follow EPFL on social media

Follow us on Facebook. Follow us on Twitter. Follow us on Instagram. Follow us on Youtube. Follow us on LinkedIn.
Accessibility Disclaimer Privacy policy

© 2023 EPFL, all rights reserved