English

Physics-enhanced machine learning for virtual fluorescence microscopy

Image and Video Processing 2020-04-23 v2 Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition Machine Learning

Abstract

This paper introduces a new method of data-driven microscope design for virtual fluorescence microscopy. Our results show that by including a model of illumination within the first layers of a deep convolutional neural network, it is possible to learn task-specific LED patterns that substantially improve the ability to infer fluorescence image information from unstained transmission microscopy images. We validated our method on two different experimental setups, with different magnifications and different sample types, to show a consistent improvement in performance as compared to conventional illumination methods. Additionally, to understand the importance of learned illumination on inference task, we varied the dynamic range of the fluorescent image targets (from one to seven bits), and showed that the margin of improvement for learned patterns increased with the information content of the target. This work demonstrates the power of programmable optical elements at enabling better machine learning algorithm performance and at providing physical insight into next generation of machine-controlled imaging systems.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2004.04306,
  title  = {Physics-enhanced machine learning for virtual fluorescence microscopy},
  author = {Colin L. Cooke and Fanjie Kong and Amey Chaware and Kevin C. Zhou and Kanghyun Kim and Rong Xu and D. Michael Ando and Samuel J. Yang and Pavan Chandra Konda and Roarke Horstmeyer},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2004.04306},
  year   = {2020}
}

Comments

12 pages, 13 figures