DocumentCode :
1270587
Title :
Cell Segmentation: 50 Years Down the Road [Life Sciences]
Author :
Meijering, Erik
Author_Institution :
Univ. Med. Center, Rotterdam, Netherlands
Volume :
29
Issue :
5
fYear :
2012
Firstpage :
140
Lastpage :
145
Abstract :
Ever since the establishment of cell theory in the early 19th century, which recognized the cell as the fundamental building unit of life, biologists have sought to explain the underlying principles. Momentous discoveries were made over the course of many decades of research [1], but the quest to attain full understanding of cellular mechanisms and how to manipulate them to improve health continues to the present day, with bigger budgets, more minds, and more sophisticated tools than ever before. One of the tools to which a great deal of the progress in cell biology can be attributed is light microscopy [2]. The field has come a long way since Antoni van Leeuwenhoeks first steps in the 1670s toward improving and exploiting microscopic imaging for studying life at the cellular level. Not only do biologists today have a plethora of different, complementary microscopic imaging techniques at their disposal that enable them to visualize phenomena even way below the classical diffraction limit of light, advanced microscope systems also allow them to easily acquire very large numbers of images within just a matter of hours. The abundance, heterogeneity, dimensionality, and complexity of the data generated in modern imaging experiments rule out manual image management, processing, and analysis. Consequently, computerized techniques for performing these tasks have become of key importance for further progress in cell biology [3][6]. A central problem in many studies, and often regarded as the cornerstone of image analysis, is image segmentation. Specifically, since cellular morphology is an important phenotypic feature that is indicative of the physiological state of a cell, and since the cell contour is often required for subsequent analysis of intracellular processes (zooming in to nanoscale), or of cell sociology (zooming out to millimeter scale), the problem of cell segmentation has received increasing attention in past years [7]. Here we reflect on how the field has ev- lved over the years and how past developments can be expected to extrapolate into the future.
Keywords :
biomedical optical imaging; cellular biophysics; diseases; image segmentation; medical image processing; optical microscopy; Leeuwenhoeks first steps; advanced microscope systems; cell biology; cell contour; cell segmentation; cell sociology; cell theory; cellular level; cellular mechanisms; cellular morphology; classical diffraction limit; complementary microscopic imaging techniques; computerized techniques; image analysis; image segmentation; intracellular processing; light microscopy; manual image management; phenotypic feature; physiological state; plethora; Biological cells; Biomedical image processing; Cellular biophysics; Data visualization; Diffraction; Medical image processing; Microscopy; Nanomedicine; Intracellular processes;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Signal Processing Magazine, IEEE
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
1053-5888
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/MSP.2012.2204190
Filename :
6279591
Link To Document :
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