# Three-Dimensional Segmentation of Vesicular Networks of Fungal Hyphae in   Macroscopic Microscopy Image Stacks

**Authors:** P. Saponaro, W. Treible, A. Kolagunda, S. Rhein, J. Caplan, C., Kambhamettu, R. Wisser

arXiv: 1704.02356 · 2017-04-11

## TL;DR

This paper introduces a novel approach for segmenting and analyzing 3-D fungal hyphal networks in high-resolution microscopy images, including a synthetic data generator and gap-filling methods, to improve biological feature extraction.

## Contribution

It presents a synthetic hyphal network generator, compares vessel segmentation methods, and introduces a gap-closing technique for better 3-D fungal network analysis in microscopy images.

## Key findings

- Synthetic hyphal network generator demonstrated realistic data creation.
- Comparison of segmentation methods identified the most effective approach.
- Gap-closing method improved network connectivity in imperfect images.

## Abstract

Automating the extraction and quantification of features from three-dimensional (3-D) image stacks is a critical task for advancing computer vision research. The union of 3-D image acquisition and analysis enables the quantification of biological resistance of a plant tissue to fungal infection through the analysis of attributes such as fungal penetration depth, fungal mass, and branching of the fungal network of connected cells. From an image processing perspective, these tasks reduce to segmentation of vessel-like structures and the extraction of features from their skeletonization. In order to sample multiple infection events for analysis, we have developed an approach we refer to as macroscopic microscopy. However, macroscopic microscopy produces high-resolution image stacks that pose challenges to routine approaches and are difficult for a human to annotate to obtain ground truth data. We present a synthetic hyphal network generator, a comparison of several vessel segmentation methods, and a minimum spanning tree method for connecting small gaps resulting from imperfections in imaging or incomplete skeletonization of hyphal networks. Qualitative results are shown for real microscopic data. We believe the comparison of vessel detectors on macroscopic microscopy data, the synthetic vessel generator, and the gap closing technique are beneficial to the image processing community.

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

22 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1704.02356/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1704.02356