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  3. Fast light-field 3D microscopy with out-of-distribution detection and adaptation through conditional normalizing flows.
 

Fast light-field 3D microscopy with out-of-distribution detection and adaptation through conditional normalizing flows.

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BORIS DOI
10.48350/193273
Publisher DOI
10.1364/BOE.504039
PubMed ID
38404325
Description
Real-time 3D fluorescence microscopy is crucial for the spatiotemporal analysis of live organisms, such as neural activity monitoring. The eXtended field-of-view light field microscope (XLFM), also known as Fourier light field microscope, is a straightforward, single snapshot solution to achieve this. The XLFM acquires spatial-angular information in a single camera exposure. In a subsequent step, a 3D volume can be algorithmically reconstructed, making it exceptionally well-suited for real-time 3D acquisition and potential analysis. Unfortunately, traditional reconstruction methods (like deconvolution) require lengthy processing times (0.0220 Hz), hampering the speed advantages of the XLFM. Neural network architectures can overcome the speed constraints but do not automatically provide a way to certify the realism of their reconstructions, which is essential in the biomedical realm. To address these shortcomings, this work proposes a novel architecture to perform fast 3D reconstructions of live immobilized zebrafish neural activity based on a conditional normalizing flow. It reconstructs volumes at 8 Hz spanning 512x512x96 voxels, and it can be trained in under two hours due to the small dataset requirements (50 image-volume pairs). Furthermore, normalizing flows provides a way to compute the exact likelihood of a sample. This allows us to certify whether the predicted output is in- or ood, and retrain the system when a novel sample is detected. We evaluate the proposed method on a cross-validation approach involving multiple in-distribution samples (genetically identical zebrafish) and various out-of-distribution ones.
Date of Publication
2024-02-01
Publication Type
Article
Subject(s)
000 Computer science, knowledge & systems
600 Technology > 620 Engineering
Language(s)
en
Contributor(s)
Page Vizcaíno, Josué
Symvoulidis, Panagiotis
Wang, Zeguan
Jelten, Jonas
Favaro, Paolo
Institut für Informatik (INF) - Computer Vision Group
Boyden, Edward S
Lasser, Tobias
Additional Credits
Institut für Informatik (INF) - Computer Vision Group
Series
Biomedical optics express
Publisher
Optical Society of America
ISSN
2156-7085
Access(Rights)
open.access
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