SPCVApr 8, 2022

Dynamic super-resolution in particle tracking problems

arXiv:2204.04092v12 citationsh-index: 61
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This provides a theoretical foundation for improving particle tracking resolution in biological imaging, though it is incremental as it builds on existing dynamic reconstruction concepts.

The paper tackles the problem of particle tracking in biological imaging by analyzing the resolution limits for simultaneously recovering source locations and velocities from all frames, showing that super-resolution is achievable when location-velocity pairs are separated beyond certain distances, with velocity reconstruction having a better resolution limit that improves as particles move.

Particle tracking in biological imaging is concerned with reconstructing the trajectories, locations, or velocities of the targeting particles. The standard approach of particle tracking consists of two steps: first reconstructing statically the source locations in each time step, and second applying tracking techniques to obtain the trajectories and velocities. In contrast, the dynamic reconstruction seeks to simultaneously recover the source locations and velocities from all frames, which enjoys certain advantages. In this paper, we provide a rigorous mathematical analysis for the resolution limit of reconstructing source number, locations, and velocities by general dynamical reconstruction in particle tracking problems, by which we demonstrate the possibility of achieving super-resolution for the dynamic reconstruction. We show that when the location-velocity pairs of the particles are separated beyond certain distances (the resolution limits), the number of particles and the location-velocity pair can be stably recovered. The resolution limits are related to the cut-off frequency of the imaging system, signal-to-noise ratio, and the sparsity of the source. By these estimates, we also derive a stability result for a sparsity-promoting dynamic reconstruction. In addition, we further show that the reconstruction of velocities has a better resolution limit which improves constantly as the particles moving. This result is derived by an observation that the inherent cut-off frequency for the velocity recovery can be viewed as the total observation time multiplies the cut-off frequency of the imaging system, which may lead to a better resolution limit as compared to the one for each diffraction-limited frame. It is anticipated that this observation can inspire new reconstruction algorithms that improve the resolution of particle tracking in practice.

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