Abstract

Light-field microscopy has emerged as a technique of choice for high-speed volumetric imaging of fast biological processes. However, artefacts, non-uniform resolution, and a slow reconstruction speed have limited its full capabilities for in toto extraction of the dynamic spatiotemporal patterns in samples. Here, we combined a view-channel-depth (VCD) neural network with light-field microscopy to mitigate these limitations, yielding artefact-free three-dimensional image sequences with uniform spatial resolution and high video-rate reconstruction throughput. We imaged neuronal activities across moving C. elegans and blood flow in a beating zebrafish heart at single-cell resolution with volumetric imaging rates up to 200 Hz.

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