IVCVMay 10, 2024

Prior-guided Diffusion Model for Cell Segmentation in Quantitative Phase Imaging

arXiv:2405.06175v11 citationsh-index: 48
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses the need for faster and more accurate cell segmentation in biomedical imaging, though it is incremental as it builds on existing diffusion model methods.

The study tackled the inefficiency of diffusion model-based cell segmentation in quantitative phase imaging by introducing a prior-guided mechanism that incorporates content information into the starting noise, achieving superior performance with only a single sampling step.

Purpose: Quantitative phase imaging (QPI) is a label-free technique that provides high-contrast images of tissues and cells without the use of chemicals or dyes. Accurate semantic segmentation of cells in QPI is essential for various biomedical applications. While DM-based segmentation has demonstrated promising results, the requirement for multiple sampling steps reduces efficiency. This study aims to enhance DM-based segmentation by introducing prior-guided content information into the starting noise, thereby minimizing inefficiencies associated with multiple sampling. Approach: A prior-guided mechanism is introduced into DM-based segmentation, replacing randomly sampled starting noise with noise informed by content information. This mechanism utilizes another trained DM and DDIM inversion to incorporate content information from the to-be-segmented images into the starting noise. An evaluation method is also proposed to assess the quality of the starting noise, considering both content and distribution information. Results: Extensive experiments on various QPI datasets for cell segmentation showed that the proposed method achieved superior performance in DM-based segmentation with only a single sampling. Ablation studies and visual analysis further highlighted the significance of content priors in DM-based segmentation. Conclusion: The proposed method effectively leverages prior content information to improve DM-based segmentation, providing accurate results while reducing the need for multiple samplings. The findings emphasize the importance of integrating content priors into DM-based segmentation methods for optimal performance.

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