Sixian You

2papers

2 Papers

IVOct 24, 2023
Learned, uncertainty-driven adaptive acquisition for photon-efficient scanning microscopy

Cassandra Tong Ye, Jiashu Han, Kunzan Liu et al.

Scanning microscopy systems, such as confocal and multiphoton microscopy, are powerful imaging tools for probing deep into biological tissue. However, scanning systems have an inherent trade-off between acquisition time, field of view, phototoxicity, and image quality, often resulting in noisy measurements when fast, large field of view, and/or gentle imaging is needed. Deep learning could be used to denoise noisy microscopy measurements, but these algorithms can be prone to hallucination, which can be disastrous for medical and scientific applications. We propose a method to simultaneously denoise and predict pixel-wise uncertainty for scanning microscopy systems, improving algorithm trustworthiness and providing statistical guarantees for deep learning predictions. Furthermore, we propose to leverage this learned, pixel-wise uncertainty to drive an adaptive acquisition technique that rescans only the most uncertain regions of a sample, saving time and reducing the total light dose to the sample. We demonstrate our method on experimental confocal and multiphoton microscopy systems, showing that our uncertainty maps can pinpoint hallucinations in the deep learned predictions. Finally, with our adaptive acquisition technique, we demonstrate up to 16X reduction in acquisition time and total light dose while successfully recovering fine features in the sample and reducing hallucinations. We are the first to demonstrate distribution-free uncertainty quantification for a denoising task with real experimental data and the first to propose adaptive acquisition based on reconstruction uncertainty.

20.9CVMar 11
MAD: Microenvironment-Aware Distillation -- A Pretraining Strategy for Virtual Spatial Omics from Microscopy

Jiashu Han, Kunzan Liu, Yeojin Kim et al.

Bridging microscopy and omics would allow us to read molecular states from images-at single-cell resolution and tissue scale-without the cost and throughput limits of omics technologies. Self-supervised pretraining offers a scalable approach with minimal labels, yet how to encode single-cell identity within tissue environments-and the extent of biological information such models can capture-remains an open question. Here, we introduce MAD (microenvironment-aware distillation), a pretraining strategy that learns cell-centric embeddings by jointly self-distilling the morphology view and the microenvironment view of the same indexed cell into a unified embedding space. Across diverse tissues and imaging modalities, MAD achieves state-of-the-art prediction performance on downstream tasks including cell subtyping, transcriptomic prediction, and bioinformatic inference. MAD even outperforms foundation models with a similar number of model parameters that have been trained on substantially larger datasets. These results demonstrate that MAD's dual-view joint self-distillation effectively captures the complexity and diversity of cells within tissues. Together, this establishes MAD as a general tool for representation learning in microscopy, enabling virtual spatial omics and biological insights from vast microscopy datasets.