Back

Real-time Noise-suppressed Wide-Dynamic-Range Compression in Ultrahigh-Resolution Neuronal Imaging

Borah, B. J.; Sun, C.-K.

2021-10-01 bioengineering
10.1101/2021.09.29.462090 bioRxiv
Show abstract

With a limited dynamic range of an imaging system, there are always regions with signal intensities comparable to the noise level, if the signal intensity distribution is close to or even wider than the available dynamic range. Optical brain/neuronal imaging is such a case where weak-intensity ultrafine structures, such as, nerve fibers, dendrites and dendritic spines, often coexist with ultrabright structures, such as, somas. A high fluorescence-protein concentration makes the soma order-of-magnitude brighter than the adjacent ultrafine structures resulting in an ultra-wide dynamic range. A straightforward enhancement of the weak-intensity structures often leads to saturation of the brighter ones, and might further result in amplification of high-frequency background noises. An adaptive illumination strategy to real-time-compress the dynamic range demands a dedicated hardware to operate and owing to electronic limitations, might encounter a poor effective bandwidth especially when each digitized pixel is required to be illumination optimized. Furthermore, such a method is often not immune to noise-amplification while locally enhancing a weak-intensity structure. We report a dedicated-hardware-free method for rapid noise-suppressed wide-dynamic-range compression so as to enhance visibility of such weak-intensity structures in terms of both contrast-ratio and signal-to-noise ratio while minimizing saturation of the brightest ones. With large-FOV aliasing-free two-photon fluorescence neuronal imaging, we validate its effectiveness by retrieving weak-intensity ultrafine structures amidst a strong noisy background. With compute-unified-device-architecture (CUDA)-acceleration, a time-complexity of <3 ms for a 1000x1000-sized 16-bit data-set is secured, enabling a real-time applicability of the same.

Matching journals

The top 5 journals account for 50% of the predicted probability mass.

1
Optics Express
23 papers in training set
Top 0.1%
14.2%
2
Light: Science & Applications
16 papers in training set
Top 0.1%
12.3%
3
Optica
25 papers in training set
Top 0.1%
10.0%
4
Optics Letters
13 papers in training set
Top 0.1%
8.3%
5
ACS Photonics
13 papers in training set
Top 0.1%
8.3%
50% of probability mass above
6
Nature Communications
4913 papers in training set
Top 29%
6.3%
7
Biomedical Optics Express
84 papers in training set
Top 0.4%
4.2%
8
Advanced Science
249 papers in training set
Top 5%
3.9%
9
Nature Methods
336 papers in training set
Top 3%
3.5%
10
Communications Biology
886 papers in training set
Top 3%
2.8%
11
Scientific Reports
3102 papers in training set
Top 43%
2.8%
12
IEEE Transactions on Medical Imaging
18 papers in training set
Top 0.2%
2.4%
13
ACS Nano
99 papers in training set
Top 2%
2.0%
14
Science Advances
1098 papers in training set
Top 20%
1.5%
15
Photoacoustics
11 papers in training set
Top 0.3%
1.2%
16
Nano Letters
63 papers in training set
Top 2%
1.2%
17
Cell Systems
167 papers in training set
Top 11%
0.9%
18
Journal of Biophotonics
16 papers in training set
Top 0.6%
0.8%
19
PLOS ONE
4510 papers in training set
Top 68%
0.7%
20
Journal of Biomedical Optics
25 papers in training set
Top 0.8%
0.6%
21
Lab on a Chip
88 papers in training set
Top 1%
0.6%
22
Bioinformatics
1061 papers in training set
Top 10%
0.6%
23
Journal of Microscopy
18 papers in training set
Top 0.5%
0.6%