Hi,
Oliver Braubach wrote: > ImageJ says that they are at 16-bit? well, it would be interesting to see if the lsm is indeed 8, 12 or 16 bit. A simple test might be the filesize. Take x-resolution * y-resolution * slices * stacks, that should be the rough filesize for 8 bit. If your filesize is 3/2 of that, its 12 bit. If your filesize is twice that, its 16 bit. So for a single stack of 512 * 512 * 20 slices * 2 channels, you should have 10485760 byte ~ 10MB for 8 bit, 15MB for 12 bit or 20MB for 16 bit. Of course this only works if you have uncompressed lsm, but mine are always uncompressed so chances are good. > Is there some resampling going on? Do I > need to change this? Any insight would be most welcome. If you have 12 or 16 bit, your monitor can only show you 8 bit of that. You can use the Brightness/Contrast setting to change which 'region' of your dynamic range you want to see. Or you can make a gamma-correction (0.5 or 0.4 should be fine) to compress the dynamic range, then it will 'fit' on your monitor. Cheers, Mario -- Mario Emmenlauer Phone: +49-(0)761-203-8284 Institute for Computer Science Fax: +49-(0)761-203-8262 Chair of Pattern Recognition and Image Processing Albert-Ludwigs-University Georges-Koehler-Allee 052, room 01-022 79110 Freiburg mailto:emmenlau * informatik.uni-freiburg.de Germany http://lmb.informatik.uni-freiburg.de/people/emmenlau/ |
Hi Oliver. Open one of your images, hit [h] to get a histogram - the
values should be spread out across the full range with a peak or two depending on the subject. Then open image-> adjust-> brightness and contrast and adjust the max and min values to be just above and below your image data. hopefully this will make a difference- it's possible that imageJ's default windowing isn't working well for your images. Good luck Mike Quoting Oliver Braubach <[hidden email]>: > Hi > > I am having trouble viewing and processing Confocal Stacks (in LSM format, > usually 8-bit) in ImageJ. The problem is that through being opened > with ImageJ > individual slices in the stack become artificiallly overexposed, leaving them > as nothing more but a lot of white and black - all the detail (gray) is lost. > The images are fine when viewed in LSM image browser (Zeiss) and are > not badly > taken. > ImageJ says that they are at 16-bit? Is there some resampling going on? Do I > need to change this? Any insight would be most welcome. > Thanks. > Oliver > |
Dear Michael
Thanks for you input regarding my ImageJ troubles. I followed your suggestion and was able to overcome this problem. Greetings from Canada Oliver Braubach Laboratory of Synaptic Function and Plasticity Department of Physiology and Biophysics Dalhousie University Halifax, NS B3H 1X5 Canada Tel: 902.494.6471 Fax: 902.494.1685 On Oct 27, 2007, at 7:12 AM, Michael Doube wrote: > Hi Oliver. Open one of your images, hit [h] to get a histogram - > the values should be spread out across the full range with a peak > or two depending on the subject. Then open image-> adjust-> > brightness and contrast and adjust the max and min values to be > just above and below your image data. hopefully this will make a > difference- it's possible that imageJ's default windowing isn't > working well for your images. > > Good luck > > Mike > > Quoting Oliver Braubach <[hidden email]>: > >> Hi >> >> I am having trouble viewing and processing Confocal Stacks (in LSM >> format, >> usually 8-bit) in ImageJ. The problem is that through being >> opened with ImageJ >> individual slices in the stack become artificiallly overexposed, >> leaving them >> as nothing more but a lot of white and black - all the detail >> (gray) is lost. >> The images are fine when viewed in LSM image browser (Zeiss) and >> are not badly >> taken. >> ImageJ says that they are at 16-bit? Is there some resampling >> going on? Do I >> need to change this? Any insight would be most welcome. >> Thanks. >> Oliver >> |
Free forum by Nabble | Edit this page |