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ASIST: Annotation-free Synthetic Instance Segmentation and Tracking by Adversarial Simulations (2101.00567v3)

Published 3 Jan 2021 in eess.IV and cs.CV

Abstract: Background: The quantitative analysis of microscope videos often requires instance segmentation and tracking of cellular and subcellular objects. The traditional method consists of two stages: (1) performing instance object segmentation of each frame, and (2) associating objects frame-by-frame. Recently, pixel-embedding-based deep learning approaches these two steps simultaneously as a single stage holistic solution. In computer vision, annotated training data with consistent segmentation and tracking is resource intensive, the severity of which is multiplied in microscopy imaging due to (1) dense objects (e.g., overlapping or touching), and (2) high dynamics (e.g., irregular motion and mitosis). Adversarial simulations have provided successful solutions to alleviate the lack of such annotations in dynamics scenes in computer vision, such as using simulated environments (e.g., computer games) to train real-world self-driving systems. Methods: In this paper, we propose an annotation-free synthetic instance segmentation and tracking (ASIST) method with adversarial simulation and single-stage pixel-embedding based learning. Contribution: The contribution of this paper is three-fold: (1) the proposed method aggregates adversarial simulations and single-stage pixel-embedding based deep learning; (2) the method is assessed with both the cellular (i.e., HeLa cells) and subcellular (i.e., microvilli) objects; and (3) to the best of our knowledge, this is the first study to explore annotation-free instance segmentation and tracking study for microscope videos. Results: The ASIST method achieved an important step forward, when compared with fully supervised approaches: ASIST shows 7% to 11% higher segmentation, detection and tracking performance on microvilli relative to fully supervised methods, and comparable performance on Hela cell videos.

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Authors (9)
  1. Quan Liu (116 papers)
  2. Isabella M. Gaeta (3 papers)
  3. Mengyang Zhao (15 papers)
  4. Ruining Deng (67 papers)
  5. Aadarsh Jha (14 papers)
  6. Bryan A. Millis (7 papers)
  7. Anita Mahadevan-Jansen (4 papers)
  8. Matthew J. Tyska (5 papers)
  9. Yuankai Huo (161 papers)
Citations (13)

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