Scale selection and machine learning based cell segmentation and tracking in time lapse microscopy.

Journal: Scientific reports
PMID:

Abstract

Monitoring and tracking of cell motion is a key component for understanding disease mechanisms and evaluating the effects of treatments. Time-lapse optical microscopy has been commonly employed for studying cell cycle phases. However, usual manual cell tracking is very time consuming and has poor reproducibility. Automated cell tracking techniques are challenged by variability of cell region intensity distributions and resolution limitations. In this work, we introduce a comprehensive cell segmentation and tracking methodology. A key contribution of this work is that it employs multi-scale space-time interest point detection and characterization for automatic scale selection and cell segmentation. Another contribution is the use of a neural network with class prototype balancing for detection of cell regions. This work also offers a structured mathematical framework that uses graphs for track generation and cell event detection. We evaluated cell segmentation, detection, and tracking performance of our method on time-lapse sequences of the Cell Tracking Challenge (CTC). We also compared our technique to top performing techniques from CTC. Performance evaluation results indicate that the proposed methodology is competitive with these techniques, and that it generalizes very well to diverse cell types and sizes, and multiple imaging techniques. The code of our method is publicly available on https://github.com/smakrogi/CSTQ_Pub/ , (release v.3.2).

Authors

  • Nagasoujanya Annasamudram
    Division of Physics, Engineering, Mathematics and Computer Science, Delaware State University, Dover, 19901, DE, USA.
  • Jian Zhao
    Key Laboratory of Intelligent Rehabilitation and Barrier-Free for the Disabled (Changchun University), Ministry of Education, Changchun University, Changchun 130012, China.
  • Olaitan Oluwadare
    Division of Physics, Engineering, Mathematics and Computer Science, Delaware State University, Dover, 19901, DE, USA.
  • Aashish Prashanth
    Division of Physics, Engineering, Mathematics and Computer Science, Delaware State University, Dover, 19901, DE, USA.
  • Sokratis Makrogiannis
    Division of Physics, Engineering, Mathematics and Computer Science, Delaware State University, Dover, DE 19901-2277, USA. Electronic address: smakrogiannis@desu.edu.