Automatic Summarization of Changes in Biological Image Sequences Using Algorithmic Information Theory

  • Authors:
  • Andrew R. Cohen;Christopher S. Bjornsson;Sally Temple;Gary Banker;Badrinath Roysam

  • Affiliations:
  • University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee;Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Troy;New York Neural Stem Cell Institute, Rensselaer;Oregon Health and Science University, Portland;Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Troy

  • Venue:
  • IEEE Transactions on Pattern Analysis and Machine Intelligence
  • Year:
  • 2009

Quantified Score

Hi-index 0.14

Visualization

Abstract

An algorithmic information-theoretic method is presented for object-level summarization of meaningful changes in image sequences. Object extraction and tracking data are represented as an attributed tracking graph (ATG). Time courses of object states are compared using an adaptive information distance measure, aided by a closed-form multidimensional quantization. The notion of meaningful summarization is captured by using the gap statistic to estimate the randomness deficiency from algorithmic statistics. The summary is the clustering result and feature subset that maximize the gap statistic. This approach was validated on four bioimaging applications: 1) It was applied to a synthetic data set containing two populations of cells differing in the rate of growth, for which it correctly identified the two populations and the single feature out of 23 that separated them; 2) it was applied to 59 movies of three types of neuroprosthetic devices being inserted in the brain tissue at three speeds each, for which it correctly identified insertion speed as the primary factor affecting tissue strain; 3) when applied to movies of cultured neural progenitor cells, it correctly distinguished neurons from progenitors without requiring the use of a fixative stain; and 4) when analyzing intracellular molecular transport in cultured neurons undergoing axon specification, it automatically confirmed the role of kinesins in axon specification.