COMMENTS RELATED TO SCIENTIFIC IMAGING
"CONFOCAL"
COLORS ARE WRONG. The red, green and blue colors commonly used for confocal images simply
do not appear with equal brightness on the computer screen, nor do
these reproduce. These color tables need to be re-created in order to
have colors fit for output (see pdf of Microscopy Today article).
Automated actions for creating "output" colors can be obtained with
actions provided at seminars given by Jerry.
EVENLY
ILLUMINATED SAMPLES A MUST FOR IMAGE ANALYSIS.
Especially when thresholding to separate features of interest from
background, an evenly illuminated field is critical. This requires
flatfield (shading) correction when acquiring images, and non-koehler
illumination (condensor aperature all the way open when acquiring in
brightfield) to eliminate excess detail within features.
PHOTOSHOP
CAN CORRECT UNEVEN ILLUMINATION FOR EM, GELS, LIGHT MICROSCOPY. You won't find this in a Photoshop manual, but methods exist within
Photoshop for correcting uneven illumination. See pdf for more info.
PHOTOSHOP
CAN SEPARATE FEATURES OF INTEREST FROM BACKGROUND (SEGMENT). Several means to segment images can be found within Photohoshop. These
include grayscale erode & dilate (minimum/maximum), separation
of features by color, several color modes from which a grayscale
channel can reveal an easier means for separation, median filtering to
remove noise, high pass filtering to flatten background, etc.
H&E
IMAGES ARE OFTEN SATURATED IN THE PINK RANGE. Many
digital cameras make eosin neon-pink or neon-fuschia. These colors need
to be desaturated by using the Hue & Saturation tool (Image > Adust(ments) > Hue & Saturation) or by correctly
applying auto-color. Both methods are covered in Jerry's seminars.
THE
"IMAGE SIZE" DIALOGUE BOX IS THE MOST DANGEROUS BOX IN PHOTOSHOP. Resample
should be UNCHECKED unless a specific output resolution is required
(e.g., when going to publication). Otherwise the inherent resolution of
the image can change!
YOU
CAN'T ALWAYS RELY UPON 16- TO 8-BIT CONVERSION UNDER MODE IN PHOTOSHOP.
Software included with some scientific cameras include exporting or
saving to 16-bit TIFF files. These files open in pre-CS versions of
Photoshop as 16-bit, but the values are truncated to the 8-bit range
(this can be seen by looking at the histogram: under Image > Histogram). Adjustments in grayscale levels
must be made BEFORE converting image to 8-bits/channel.\
IMAGE
STACKS FROM CONFOCAL SOFTWARE CAN BE OPENED AS LAYERS IN PHOTOSHOP...
but only by using GIMP first. GIMP is a program that contains many
functions that also exist in Photoshop, but the interface is
unfamiliar. It is worth downloading, however, for purposes of reading
TIFF stacks and placing these in layers so that the stack can be saved
in the Photoshop format (make sure, however, that each layer uses Lighten,
which is similar to the maximum setting in confocal software
applications). The website for downloading GIMP is http://gimp-win.sourceforge.net/stable.html for Windows and http://www.gimp.org/macintosh/ for Macintosh OSX. For Windows, both the GIMP program AND the GTK
software needs to be downloaded. For the Mac, it appears that both FINK
and GIMP.APP need to be downloaded.
SHARPENING
METHODS CAN BE USED TO SHOW BONE DENSITY IN X-RAYS, AND TO EMPHASIZE
FEATURES FOR PRESENTATION PURPOSES. The use of
unsharp mask and a layering method employing the high pass filter can
emphasize details within features.
PSUEDOCOLOR
TABLES CAN BE APPLIED TO GRAYSCALE IMAGES IN PHOTOSHOP. Color tables using the visible spectrum is the most useful psuedocolor
option in Photoshop. See the psuedocoloring article for more details.
WHITE
AND BLACK VALUES ARE NOT APPLIED APPROPRIATELY IN SCIENTIFIC IMAGES. The
deepest black values for images should NOT be set to 0: instead, this
value should be set for output devices. The generic output values are
given in seminars given by Jerry, or these can be found in ... |