Scattering polarimetry enables correlative nerve fiber imaging and multimodal analysis
Franca auf der Heiden, Markus Axer, Katrin Amunts, Miriam Menzel

TL;DR
The paper introduces the Scattering Polarimeter, a novel microscope integrating 3D-PLI and ComSLI techniques into a single device for enhanced, multimodal nerve fiber imaging in brain tissue.
Contribution
It presents a combined system that unifies 3D-PLI and ComSLI in one instrument, enabling faster, correlative, and multimodal nerve fiber mapping.
Findings
Comparable results to state-of-the-art setups
Multimodal fiber direction maps generated
Potential for advanced brain imaging applications
Abstract
Mapping the intricate network of nerve fibers is crucial for understanding brain function. Three-Dimensional Polarized Light Imaging (3D-PLI) and Computational Scattered Light Imaging (ComSLI) map dense nerve fibers in brain sections with micrometer resolution using visible light. 3D-PLI reconstructs 3D-fiber orientations, while ComSLI disentangles multiple directions per pixel. So far, these imaging techniques have been realized in separate setups. A combination within a single device would facilitate faster measurements, pixelwise mapping, cross-validation of fiber orientations, and leverage the advantages of each technique while mitigating their limitations. Here, we introduce the Scattering Polarimeter, a microscope that facilitates correlative large-area scans by integrating 3D-PLI and ComSLI measurements into a single system. Based on a Mueller polarimeter, it incorporates…
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