Hello everybody,
We have a "problem" when doing Stacks with images (32 bits) that have diferent ranges of their pixel values . ImageJ takes one range of one image to decide the color scale. But then, ImageJ aplies this color-scale to all the images of the Stack, so that if there is any image that is more intense than the first one, this last one is very saturated or otherwise it can be almost all dark, even if this image alone (this is when is not in a stack) looks very well. The image appearance can be restored by threshold reseting, but then the other images in the stack are rescaled again. Is it because image depth is infinite (32 bits)? Can this be avoided somehow? I hope you can help us. Thanks a lot. Maria Calvo and Pol Solans -- ___________________________________ Dra. Maria Calvo Unitat de Microscòpia Confocal Serveis Cientificotècnics-C.Casanova Facultat de Medicina Universitat de Barcelona- IDIBAPS C/ Casanova 143 Barcelona 08036 Tel: 34 934037159/39930 Fax: 34 934039946 E-mail: [hidden email] ___________________________________ |
On Mar 9, 2010, at 10:53 AM, Maria Calvo wrote:
> Hello everybody, > > We have a "problem" when doing Stacks with images (32 bits) that have > diferent ranges of their pixel values . ImageJ takes one range of one image > to decide the color scale. But then, ImageJ aplies this color-scale to all > the images of the Stack, so that if there is any image that is more intense > than the first one, this last one is very saturated or otherwise it can be > almost all dark, even if this image alone (this is when is not in a stack) > looks very well. > The image appearance can be restored by threshold reseting, but then > the other images in the stack are rescaled again. > > Is it because image depth is infinite (32 bits)? Can this be avoided somehow? > > I hope you can help us. Thanks a lot. You can avoid this problem by converting the n image stack to an n channel hyperstack. This example macro creates a 25 channel hyperstack containing images with pixel value ranges that vary from 0-1 to 0-15594. n = 25; newImage("Demo", "32-bit Ramp", 512, 512, n); run("Macro...", "code=v=v*pow(z+1,3) stack"); // Process>Math>Macro run("Stack to Hyperstack...", "channels="+n+" slices=1 frames=1 display=Grayscale"); for (i=1; i<=n; i++) { Stack.setChannel(i); resetMinAndMax; getStatistics(pixels, mean, min, max); print(i+": "+min+"-"+max); } |
Dear Wayne Rasband,
Thank you for the answer, we will try that, Cheers, MariaCalvo Rasband, Wayne (NIH/NIMH) [E] escribió: > On Mar 9, 2010, at 10:53 AM, Maria Calvo wrote: > > >> Hello everybody, >> >> We have a "problem" when doing Stacks with images (32 bits) that have >> diferent ranges of their pixel values . ImageJ takes one range of one image >> to decide the color scale. But then, ImageJ aplies this color-scale to all >> the images of the Stack, so that if there is any image that is more intense >> than the first one, this last one is very saturated or otherwise it can be >> almost all dark, even if this image alone (this is when is not in a stack) >> looks very well. >> The image appearance can be restored by threshold reseting, but then >> the other images in the stack are rescaled again. >> >> Is it because image depth is infinite (32 bits)? Can this be avoided somehow? >> >> I hope you can help us. Thanks a lot. >> > > You can avoid this problem by converting the n image stack to an n channel hyperstack. This example macro creates a 25 channel hyperstack containing images with pixel value ranges that vary from 0-1 to 0-15594. > > n = 25; > newImage("Demo", "32-bit Ramp", 512, 512, n); > run("Macro...", "code=v=v*pow(z+1,3) stack"); // Process>Math>Macro > run("Stack to Hyperstack...", > "channels="+n+" slices=1 frames=1 display=Grayscale"); > for (i=1; i<=n; i++) { > Stack.setChannel(i); > resetMinAndMax; > getStatistics(pixels, mean, min, max); > print(i+": "+min+"-"+max); > } > > -- ___________________________________ Dra. Maria Calvo Unitat de Microscòpia Confocal Serveis Cientificotècnics-C.Casanova Facultat de Medicina Universitat de Barcelona- IDIBAPS C/ Casanova 143 Barcelona 08036 Tel: 34 934037159/39930 Fax: 34 934039946 E-mail: [hidden email] ___________________________________ |
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