ABSTRACT
Efficient storage and sharing of massive biomedical data would open up their wide accessibility to different institutions and disciplines. However, compressors tailored for natural photos/videos are rapidly limited for biomedical data, while emerging deep learning-based methods demand huge training data and are difficult to generalize. Here, we propose to conduct Biomedical data compRession with Implicit nEural Function (BRIEF) by representing the target data with compact neural networks, which are data specific and thus have no generalization issues. Benefiting from the strong representation capability of implicit neural function, BRIEF achieves 2[Formula: see text]3 orders of magnitude compression on diverse biomedical data at significantly higher fidelity than existing techniques. Besides, BRIEF is of consistent performance across the whole data volume, and supports customized spatially varying fidelity. BRIEF's multifold advantageous features also serve reliable downstream tasks at low bandwidth. Our approach will facilitate low-bandwidth data sharing and promote collaboration and progress in the biomedical field.
Subject(s)
Information Dissemination , Neural Networks, Computer , Humans , Information Dissemination/methods , Data Compression/methods , Deep Learning , Biomedical Research/methodsABSTRACT
Genomic and transcriptomic image data, represented by DNA and RNA fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH), respectively, together with proteomic data, particularly that related to nuclear proteins, can help elucidate gene regulation in relation to the spatial positions of chromatins, messenger RNAs, and key proteins. However, methods for image-based multi-omics data collection and analysis are lacking. To this end, we aimed to develop the first integrative browser called iSMOD (image-based Single-cell Multi-omics Database) to collect and browse comprehensive FISH and nucleus proteomics data based on the title, abstract, and related experimental figures, which integrates multi-omics studies focusing on the key players in the cell nucleus from 20 000+ (still growing) published papers. We have also provided several exemplar demonstrations to show iSMOD's wide applications-profiling multi-omics research to reveal the molecular target for diseases; exploring the working mechanism behind biological phenomena using multi-omics interactions, and integrating the 3D multi-omics data in a virtual cell nucleus. iSMOD is a cornerstone for delineating a global view of relevant research to enable the integration of scattered data and thus provides new insights regarding the missing components of molecular pathway mechanisms and facilitates improved and efficient scientific research.
Subject(s)
Multiomics , Proteomics , In Situ Hybridization, Fluorescence , Genomics/methods , Gene Expression ProfilingABSTRACT
Video object detection is a widely studied topic and has made significant progress in the past decades. However, the feature extraction and calculations in existing video object detectors demand decent imaging quality and avoidance of severe motion blur. Under extremely dark scenarios, due to limited sensor sensitivity, we have to trade off signal-to-noise ratio for motion blur compensation or vice versa, and thus suffer from performance deterioration. To address this issue, we propose to temporally multiplex a frame sequence into one snapshot and extract the cues characterizing object motion for trajectory retrieval. For effective encoding, we build a prototype for encoded capture by mounting a highly compatible programmable shutter. Correspondingly, in terms of decoding, we design an end-to-end deep network called detection from coded snapshot (DECENT) to retrieve sequential bounding boxes from the coded blurry measurements of dynamic scenes. For effective network learning, we generate quasi-real data by incorporating physically-driven noise into the temporally coded imaging model, which circumvents the unavailability of training data and with high generalization ability on real dark videos. The approach offers multiple advantages, including low bandwidth, low cost, compact setup, and high accuracy. The effectiveness of the proposed approach is experimentally validated under low illumination vision and provide a feasible way for night surveillance.