Abstract

Image segmentation is an important process that separates objects from the background and also from each other. Applied to cells, the results can be used for cell counting which is very important in medical diagnosis and treatment, and biological research that is often used by scientists and medical practitioners. Segmenting 3D confocal microscopy images containing cells of different shapes and sizes is still challenging as the nuclei are closely packed. The watershed transform provides an efficient tool in segmenting such nuclei provided a reasonable set of markers can be found in the image. In the presence of low-contrast variation or excessive noise in the given image, the watershed transform leads to over-segmentation (a single object is overly split into multiple objects). The traditional watershed uses the local minima of the input image and will characteristically find multiple minima in one object unless they are specified (marker-controlled watershed). An alternative to using the local minima is by a supervised technique called seeded watershed, which supplies single seeds to replace the minima for the objects. Consequently, the accuracy of a seeded watershed algorithm relies on the accuracy of the predefined seeds. In this paper, we present a segmentation approach based on the geometric morphological properties of the ‘landscape’ using curvatures. The curvatures are computed as the eigenvalues of the Shape matrix, producing accurate seeds that also inherit the original shape of their respective cells. We compare with some popular approaches and show the advantage of the proposed method.

Highlights

  • Image segmentation is a very important aspect of image processing, and plays vital roles in scientific research

  • The remainder of the paper is organized as follows: In Section 2 we briefly introduce the mathematical formulation of the watershed transform

  • We present the definition of the watershed transform in the continuous case

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Summary

Introduction

Image segmentation is a very important aspect of image processing, and plays vital roles in scientific research. One such area is transcription of gene expression in a cell. One major challenge arises from the fact that cells may appear in different shapes and sizes, and are often clumped together in colonies making it very difficult to segment an image data of cells. This is even more challenging for 3D image data, due to the different morphology of the cells, for example, cell boundaries across the third (z-) dimension. Other mechanical limitations such as low resolution (imaging at high resolution can be very costly in terms of data size) of the imaging

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