Drift estimation in sparse sequential dynamic imaging, with application to nanoscale fluorescence microscopy

2016 | journal article; research paper. A publication with affiliation to the University of Göttingen.

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​Drift estimation in sparse sequential dynamic imaging, with application to nanoscale fluorescence microscopy​
Hartmann, A. K.; Huckemann, S. ; Dannemann, J.; Laitenberger, O.; Geisler, C. ; Egner, A.   & Munk, A. ​ (2016) 
Journal of the Royal Statistical Society: Series B (Statistical Methodology)78(3) pp. 563​-587​.​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.1111/rssb.12128 

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Authors
Hartmann, Alexander K.; Huckemann, Stephan ; Dannemann, Jörn; Laitenberger, Oskar; Geisler, Claudia ; Egner, Alexander ; Munk, Axel 
Abstract
A major challenge in many modern superresolution fluorescence microscopy techniques at the nanoscale lies in the correct alignment of long sequences of sparse but spatially and temporally highly resolved images. This is caused by the temporal drift of the protein structure, e.g. due to temporal thermal inhomogeneity of the object of interest or its supporting area during the observation process. We develop a simple semiparametric model for drift correction in single-marker switching microscopy. Then we propose an M-estimator for the drift and show its asymptotic normality. This is used to correct the final image and it is shown that this purely statistical method is competitive with state of the art calibration techniques which require the incorporation of fiducial markers in the specimen. Moreover, a simple bootstrap algorithm allows us to quantify the precision of the drift estimate and its effect on the final image estimation. We argue that purely statistical drift correction is even more robust than fiducial tracking, rendering the latter superfluous in many applications. The practicability of our method is demonstrated by a simulation study and by a single-marker switching application. This serves as a prototype for many other typical imaging techniques where sparse observations with high temporal resolution are blurred by motion of the object to be reconstructed.
Issue Date
2016
Journal
Journal of the Royal Statistical Society: Series B (Statistical Methodology) 
ISSN
1369-7412
eISSN
1467-9868
Language
English

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