• DocumentCode
    65861
  • Title

    Domain Adaptation for Microscopy Imaging

  • Author

    Becker, Carlos ; Christoudias, C. Mario ; Fua, Pascal

  • Author_Institution
    Comput. Vision Lab., Ecole Polytech. Fed. de Lausanne (EPFL), Lausanne, Switzerland
  • Volume
    34
  • Issue
    5
  • fYear
    2015
  • fDate
    May-15
  • Firstpage
    1125
  • Lastpage
    1139
  • Abstract
    Electron and light microscopy imaging can now deliver high-quality image stacks of neural structures. However, the amount of human annotation effort required to analyze them remains a major bottleneck. While machine learning algorithms can be used to help automate this process, they require training data, which is time-consuming to obtain manually, especially in image stacks. Furthermore, due to changing experimental conditions, successive stacks often exhibit differences that are severe enough to make it difficult to use a classifier trained for a specific one on another. This means that this tedious annotation process has to be repeated for each new stack. In this paper, we present a domain adaptation algorithm that addresses this issue by effectively leveraging labeled examples across different acquisitions and significantly reducing the annotation requirements. Our approach can handle complex, nonlinear image feature transformations and scales to large microscopy datasets that often involve high-dimensional feature spaces and large 3D data volumes. We evaluate our approach on four challenging electron and light microscopy applications that exhibit very different image modalities and where annotation is very costly. Across all applications we achieve a significant improvement over the state-of-the-art machine learning methods and demonstrate our ability to greatly reduce human annotation effort.
  • Keywords
    biomedical optical imaging; electron microscopy; learning (artificial intelligence); medical image processing; neurophysiology; optical microscopy; 3D data volumes; annotation process; classifier; domain adaptation algorithm; electron microscopy imaging; high-dimensional feature spaces; high-quality image stacks; human annotation effort; image modalities; light microscopy imaging; machine learning algorithms; microscopy datasets; neural structures; nonlinear image feature transformations; training data; Boosting; Electron microscopy; Regression tree analysis; Three-dimensional displays; Training; Training data; AdaBoost; boosting; domain adaptation; electron and light microscopy; machine learning; transfer learning;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Medical Imaging, IEEE Transactions on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    0278-0062
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/TMI.2014.2376872
  • Filename
    6971126