I think "stack" generally refers to a series of related images, in
some sort of order. Usually they have the same X-Y field and vary in
Z, Time, Wavelength, or something else. ImageJ is fairly agnostic
about what you put in a stack, but if the data is confocal, then the
"stack" probably varies in Z, Time or Wavelength.
Certainly I use ImageJ to analyze "stacks" of confocal data. Usually
Z-stacks in my case for topography measurements.
--David
On Jan 12, 2009, at 11:20 AM, Robert J. Palmer Jr. wrote:
> Is the term "stack" in Image J translatable to that as used in
> confocal or digital deconvolution microscopy? I am struggling with
> an assertion that processing of "stacks" in Image J was used to
> analyze height of a feature. Perhaps in this case the phrase
> "collecting stacks of images" refers to a group of images collected
> in x-y? This is my current understanding of the term "stack" as
> used in Image J - a series of related images that needn't
> necessarily represent any one particular field-of-view.
> --
> Robert J. Palmer Jr., Ph.D.
> Natl Inst Dental Craniofacial Res - Natl Insts Health
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