Characterisation of Stochastic Geometry in Microscopy
BRaIN / Centre for Intelligent Machines / School of Computer Science Joint Seminar
Speaker: Jon Sporring, PhD, Department of Computer Science, University of Copenhagen
Abstract: Geometrical measurements of biological objects form the basis of many quantitative analyses. Hausdorff measures such as the volume and the area of objects are simple and popular descriptors of individual objects; however, for most biological processes, the interaction between objects cannot be ignored,and the shape and function of neighboring objects are mutually influential. We present a theory on the geometrical interaction between objects inspired by K-functions for spatial point-processes. Our theory describes the relation between two objects: a reference and an observed object. We generate the r-parallel sets of the reference object, calculate the intersection between the r-parallel sets and the observed object, and define measures on these intersections. The measures are simple, like the volume or surface area, but describe further details about the shape of individual objects and their pairwise geometrical relation.