Litcius/Paper detail

Improving skeleton algorithm for helping Caenorhabditis elegans trackers

Pablo E. Layana Castro, Joan Carles Puchalt, Antonio-José Sánchez-Salmerón

2020Scientific Reports15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

One of the main problems when monitoring Caenorhabditis elegans nematodes (C. elegans) is tracking their poses by automatic computer vision systems. This is a challenge given the marked flexibility that their bodies present and the different poses that can be performed during their behaviour individually, which become even more complicated when worms aggregate with others while moving. This work proposes a simple solution by combining some computer vision techniques to help to determine certain worm poses and to identify each one during aggregation or in coiled shapes. This new method is based on the distance transformation function to obtain better worm skeletons. Experiments were performed with 205 plates, each with 10, 15, 30, 60 or 100 worms, which totals 100,000 worm poses approximately. A comparison of the proposed method was made to a classic skeletonisation method to find that 2196 problematic poses had improved by between 22% and 1% on average in the pose predictions of each worm.

Topics & Concepts

Caenorhabditis elegansBitTorrent trackerComputer scienceFlexibility (engineering)Simple (philosophy)Transformation (genetics)Tracking (education)Function (biology)CaenorhabditisAggregate (composite)Artificial intelligenceComputer visionAlgorithmBiologyMathematicsEye trackingStatisticsEvolutionary biologyGenePhilosophyEpistemologyBiochemistryPsychologyComposite materialMaterials sciencePedagogyGenetics, Aging, and Longevity in Model Organisms