Annotated Biomedical Video Generation using Denoising Diffusion Probabilistic Models and Flow Fields

The segmentation and tracking of living cells play a vital role within the biomedical domain, particularly in cancer research, drug development, and developmental biology. These are usually tedious and time-consuming tasks that are traditionally done by biomedical experts. Recently, to automatize these processes, deep learning based segmentation and tracking methods have been proposed. These methods require large-scale datasets and their full potential is constrained by the scarcity of annotated data in the biomedical imaging domain. To address this limitation, we propose Biomedical Video Diffusion Model (BVDM), capable of generating realistic-looking synthetic microscopy videos. Trained only on a single real video, BVDM can generate videos of arbitrary length with pixel-level annotations that can be used for training data-hungry models. It is composed of a denoising diffusion probabilistic model (DDPM) generating high-fidelity synthetic cell microscopy images and a flow prediction model (FPM) predicting the non-rigid transformation between consecutive video frames. During inference, initially, the DDPM imposes realistic cell textures on synthetic cell masks which are generated based on real data statistics. The flow prediction model predicts the flow field between consecutive masks and applies that to the DDPM output from the previous time frame to create the next one while keeping temporal consistency. BVDM outperforms state-of-the-art synthetic live cell microscopy video generation models. Furthermore, we demonstrate that a sufficiently large synthetic dataset enhances the performance of cell segmentation and tracking models compared to using a limited amount of available real data..

Medienart:

Preprint

Erscheinungsjahr:

2024

Erschienen:

2024

Enthalten in:

arXiv.org - (2024) vom: 26. März Zur Gesamtaufnahme - year:2024

Sprache:

Englisch

Beteiligte Personen:

Yilmaz, Rüveyda [VerfasserIn]
Eschweiler, Dennis [VerfasserIn]
Stegmaier, Johannes [VerfasserIn]

Links:

Volltext [kostenfrei]

Themen:

000
620
Computer Science - Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition
Computer Science - Machine Learning
Electrical Engineering and Systems Science - Image and Video Processing

Förderinstitution / Projekttitel:

PPN (Katalog-ID):

XAR043053610