NIH image processing program
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@vincent-j-carey-jr-4
Last seen 2 days ago
United States
Is anyone doing anything with "NIH image" a MAC-based utility for dealing with tiff images of e.g., gels? I am getting some data from this system which translates darkness to numbers. Investigators then use the numbers as density estimates. There is a windows-based tool from Scion with similar functionality. I am preparing to write a library that segments data from gels by signal-to-noise criteria applied to the "NIH image" output, but need to learn more about the processing methods of this system. Seems that hdf5 methods could be relevant. -- --- Vince Carey, PhD Ass't Prof Med (Biostatistics) Harvard Medical School Channing Laboratory - ph 6175252265 fa 6177311541 181 Longwood Ave Boston MA 02115 USA stvjc@channing.harvard.edu -----BEGIN PGP PUBLIC KEY BLOCK----- Version: PGP 6.5.8 mQCNAzqIeGUAAAEEAMJXU941vIornTS52rl6z7eo+A7wwB0km/idLnkxzIhc1uLi Qtn19OyOfG6IDSucLrtmpvwagemAnQ9jL6TVDrmlrKnqsh+FFtvUuZ37eV85L70E BsS8RZCmMYHJKfrpCwegbTVZrEkd1ByquLIN/yUwxU4IcVuHxbNQk69riQ8tAAUR tBVWaW5jZW50IEouIENhcmV5LCBKci6JAJUDBRA6iHhls1CTr2uJDy0BAdsLA/wM cCzEDsP9MqodKZfDI1s/gXW6BcCuQ6n7MdEplLgmWvyqfbvRYx4upYZ3pNp8L0zU MrlR6eCTs/eDtMO/ZbGvkqqiQO6wS2fZb1T5L/DhhtT4mEAHt0E8dNBVCj+lKr3W vYS5GqO9gY4CiT3JXFH9N19pSbUQFiNDqpmG6EbWng== =DQNF -----END PGP PUBLIC KEY BLOCK-----
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@anthony-rossini-10
Last seen 9.7 years ago
>>>>> "vincent" == Vincent J Carey, <stvjc@channing.harvard.edu> writes: vincent> Is anyone doing anything with "NIH image" a MAC-based vincent> utility for dealing with tiff images of e.g., gels? vincent> I am getting some data from this system which translates vincent> darkness to numbers. Investigators then use the numbers vincent> as density estimates. There is a windows-based tool vincent> from Scion with similar functionality. Is this different from the NIH ImageJ java-based imaging software/toolkit (http://rsb.info.nih.gov/ij/)? It looks like it. I've been meaning for years (2, actually) to integrate this with Orca. A student here evaluated it for image analysis of ELISPOT (ELISA spotting) assays. best, -tony -- A.J. Rossini Rsrch. Asst. Prof. of Biostatistics U. of Washington Biostatistics rossini@u.washington.edu FHCRC/SCHARP/HIV Vaccine Trials Net rossini@scharp.org -------------- http://software.biostat.washington.edu/ ---------------- FHCRC: M: 206-667-7025 (fax=4812)|Voicemail is pretty sketchy/use Email UW: Th: 206-543-1044 (fax=3286)|Change last 4 digits of phone to FAX (my tuesday/wednesday/friday locations are completely unpredictable.)
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> >>>>> "vincent" == Vincent J Carey, <stvjc@channing.harvard.edu> writes: > > vincent> Is anyone doing anything with "NIH image" a MAC-based > vincent> utility for dealing with tiff images of e.g., gels? > vincent> I am getting some data from this system which translates > vincent> darkness to numbers. Investigators then use the numbers > vincent> as density estimates. There is a windows-based tool > vincent> from Scion with similar functionality. > > Is this different from the NIH ImageJ java-based imaging > software/toolkit (http://rsb.info.nih.gov/ij/)? It looks like it. Thanks for the tip. I did not download the PC version of Image from "Scion". ImageJ seems to run OK on windows and linux with jdk1.3. There are plenty of sample images to work with. The problem I am facing is to assist in the determination of the composition of a sample of fragments that have lengths that are all multiples of a common number. We want to estimate the distribution of lengths or to test for different length distributions in different experiments. The image is a series of equispaced blobs of different intensities and of different sizes. ImageJ doc seems to suggest manually segmenting the profile (profile = density sketch with heights proportional to darkness), and it provides a tool to calculate area under the curve in each segment. There are no references in the top level doc to considerations of variability of the profile or to principles of determining extents of segments. The image processing interface could presumably be hooked into R handily via SJava. Where we want to keep the image data is an open question. The example tiff file for a 6 lane gel is only about 100K. But this interoperation is of minor concern at the moment. Low throughput is OK for now. I can use ImageJ offline to obtain numerical profiles of the gel data. I've done some work on an R package for automatic segmentation and area calculations based on local variability of image profile data produced by Image or ImageJ and will release that once I have a better understanding of where these profile numbers come from (if what I did turns out to make sense). It would be nice to be able to precisely juxtapose gel image tiff data with the derived profile and segmenting results in an R graph. Do I want to convert the tiff data to a matrix for plotting by image, or is there a more streamlined approach? > I've been meaning for years (2, actually) to integrate this with Orca. > A student here evaluated it for image analysis of ELISPOT (ELISA > spotting) assays. > > best, > -tony > > -- > A.J. Rossini Rsrch. Asst. Prof. of Biostatistics > U. of Washington Biostatistics rossini@u.washington.edu > FHCRC/SCHARP/HIV Vaccine Trials Net rossini@scharp.org > -------------- http://software.biostat.washington.edu/ ---------------- > FHCRC: M: 206-667-7025 (fax=4812)|Voicemail is pretty sketchy/use Email > UW: Th: 206-543-1044 (fax=3286)|Change last 4 digits of phone to FAX > (my tuesday/wednesday/friday locations are completely unpredictable.) > > > > _______________________________________________ > Bioconductor mailing list > Bioconductor@stat.math.ethz.ch > http://www.stat.math.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/bioconductor >
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