English

Moral Lineage Tracing

Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition 2017-10-03 v2 Discrete Mathematics

Abstract

Lineage tracing, the tracking of living cells as they move and divide, is a central problem in biological image analysis. Solutions, called lineage forests, are key to understanding how the structure of multicellular organisms emerges. We propose an integer linear program (ILP) whose feasible solutions define a decomposition of each image in a sequence into cells (segmentation), and a lineage forest of cells across images (tracing). Unlike previous formulations, we do not constrain the set of decompositions, except by contracting pixels to superpixels. The main challenge, as we show, is to enforce the morality of lineages, i.e., the constraint that cells do not merge. To enforce morality, we introduce path-cut inequalities. To find feasible solutions of the NP-hard ILP, with certified bounds to the global optimum, we define efficient separation procedures and apply these as part of a branch-and-cut algorithm. We show the effectiveness of this approach by analyzing feasible solutions for real microscopy data in terms of bounds and run-time, and by their weighted edit distance to ground truth lineage forests traced by humans.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1511.05512,
  title  = {Moral Lineage Tracing},
  author = {Florian Jug and Evgeny Levinkov and Corinna Blasse and Eugene W. Myers and Bjoern Andres},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1511.05512},
  year   = {2017}
}

Comments

11 pages

R2 v1 2026-06-22T11:47:44.048Z