Title :
On the feasibility of axial tracking of a fluorescent nanoparticle using a defocusing model
Author :
Subotic, Nadja ; Van De Ville, Dimitri ; Unser, Michael
Author_Institution :
Biomed. Imaging Group, Swiss Fed. Inst. of Technol., Lausanne, Switzerland
Abstract :
The image of a subresolution nanoparticle in fluorescence microscopy corresponds to a slice of the 3D point spread function (PSF). This slice relates to the out-of-focus distance of the nanoparticle. In this paper, we investigate to which extent it is possible to estimate the out-of-focus distance of the nanoparticle from a 2D image based on the knowledge of the 3D PSF. To this end, we compute the Cramer-Rao bound (CRB) that provides a lower bound on the error of the best estimator of the axial position. The calculation of the CRB involves the specification of a 3D PSF model, the assumption of a signal-dependent Poisson noise, and some acquisition parameters. Our derivation shows that the CRB depends on the defocusing distance. Interestingly, nanometer precision can be attained over a range of defocus distances and for sufficiently high SNR levels. The theoretical results are confirmed with simulated experiments using estimators based on the least-squares (LS) and normalized cross-correlation (NCC) criterion. The results obtained are very close to the theoretical CRB.
Keywords :
biological techniques; fluorescence; image resolution; least squares approximations; nanoparticles; optical correlation; optical images; optical microscopy; optical transfer function; stochastic processes; 2D image; 3D point spread function; Cramer-Rao bound; acquisition parameters; axial tracking; defocusing distance; defocusing model; fluorescence microscopy; fluorescent nanoparticle; least-squares estimation; nanometer precision; nanoparticle out-of-focus distance; normalized cross-correlation estimation; signal-dependent Poisson noise; subresolution nanoparticle image; Biological cells; Biological system modeling; Biomedical imaging; Biophysics; Cramer-Rao bounds; Fluorescence; Nanobioscience; Optical microscopy; Particle tracking; Signal to noise ratio;
Conference_Titel :
Biomedical Imaging: Nano to Macro, 2004. IEEE International Symposium on
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-8388-5
DOI :
10.1109/ISBI.2004.1398767