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Towards an Intelligent Microscope

Mar 30, 2020. | By: Amey Chaware, Colin L.Cooke, Kanghyun Kim and Roarke Horstmeyer.

Recent machine learning techniques have dramatically changed how we process digital images. However, the way in which we capture images is still largely driven by human intuition and experience. This restriction is in part due to the many available degrees of freedom that alter the image acquisition process (lens focus, exposure, filtering, etc). Here we focus on one such degree of freedom - illumination within a microscope - which can drastically alter information captured by the image sensor. We present a reinforcement learning system that adaptively explores optimal patterns to illuminate specimens for immediate classification. The agent uses a recurrent latent space to encode a large set of variably-illuminated samples and illumination patterns. We train our agent using a reward that balances classification confidence with image acquisition cost. By synthesizing knowledge over multiple snapshots, the agent can classify on the basis of all previous images with higher accuracy than from naively illuminated images, thus demonstrating a smarter way to physically capture task-specific information. Click here to visit the project page!

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This page is an educational and research resource of the Computational Optics Lab at Duke University, with the goal of providing an open platform to share research at the intersection of deep learning and imaging system design.

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Computational Optics Lab
Duke University
Fitzpatrick Center (CIEMAS) 2569
Durham, NC 27708