Citizen science, cells and CNNs - deep learning for automatic segmentation of the nuclear envelope in electron microscopy data, trained with volunteer segmentations

Published: July 29, 2020, 1:04 a.m.

Link to bioRxiv paper: http://biorxiv.org/cgi/content/short/2020.07.28.223024v1?rss=1 Authors: Spiers, H., Songhurst, H., Nightingale, L., de Folter, J., Hutchings, R., Peddie, C. J., Weston, A., Strange, A., Hindmarsh, S., Lintott, C., Collinson, L. M., Jones, M. L. Abstract: Advancements in volume electron microscopy mean it is now possible to generate thousands of serial images at nanometre resolution overnight, yet the gold standard approach for data analysis remains manual segmentation by an expert microscopist, resulting in a critical research bottleneck. Although some machine learning approaches exist in this domain, we remain far from realising the aspiration of a highly accurate, yet generic, automated analysis approach, with a major obstacle being lack of sufficient high-quality ground-truth data. To address this, we developed a novel citizen science project, Etch a Cell, to enable volunteers to manually segment the nuclear envelope of HeLa cells imaged with Serial Blockface SEM. We present our approach for aggregating multiple volunteer annotations to generate a high quality consensus segmentation, and demonstrate that data produced exclusively by volunteers can be used to train a highly accurate machine learning algorithm for automatic segmentation of the nuclear envelope, which we share here, in addition to our archived benchmark data. Copy rights belong to original authors. Visit the link for more info