| Literature DB >> 26599208 |
Lawrence N Hudson1, Vladimir Blagoderov1, Alice Heaton1, Pieter Holtzhausen2, Laurence Livermore1, Benjamin W Price1, Stéfan van der Walt2,3, Vincent S Smith1.
Abstract
The world's natural history collections constitute an enormous evidence base for scientific research on the natural world. To facilitate these studies and improve access to collections, many organisations are embarking on major programmes of digitization. This requires automated approaches to mass-digitization that support rapid imaging of specimens and associated data capture, in order to process the tens of millions of specimens common to most natural history collections. In this paper we present Inselect-a modular, easy-to-use, cross-platform suite of open-source software tools that supports the semi-automated processing of specimen images generated by natural history digitization programmes. The software is made up of a Windows, Mac OS X, and Linux desktop application, together with command-line tools that are designed for unattended operation on batches of images. Blending image visualisation algorithms that automatically recognise specimens together with workflows to support post-processing tasks such as barcode reading, label transcription and metadata capture, Inselect fills a critical gap to increase the rate of specimen digitization.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26599208 PMCID: PMC4658125 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0143402
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Comparison of features in Inselect with current multi-specimen image segmentation solutions.
| Solution | Format | Segmentation Algorithm | Metadata capture | Barcode recognition | Modularity | Open source |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ALA | Online | Manual | Simple text | No | No | Yes |
| Gigapan | Online | Manual | Simple text | No | No | No |
| ImageJ | Desktop | Automated + Manual | No | No | Yes | Yes |
| GIMP | Desktop | Automated + Manual | No | No | Yes: scripts | Yes |
|
| Desktop | Automated + Manual | Structured fields, flexible template lookups, verification | Yes: 2D, 1D | Yes: plugin support | Yes |
Fig 1The ‘Boxes’ view.
This view shows the scanned image together with bounding boxes around specimens. This document is a scan of 1,160 individuals of Tetrastichinae (a subfamily of wasps). The boxes for one tray of specimens are selected, shown outlined in light blue.
Fig 2The ‘Objects’ view.
This view shows objects in a grid. The selected object lacks a mandatory metadata field so is shown in red.
Fig 3Typical workflow.
All processes are offered by the desktop application. Shaded boxes indicate processes that can be performed by the command-line tools, which can work on batches of images and documents.
Scanned images by group.
| Group | Description | N images | File sizes (MB) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Min | Median | Max | |||
| Brahmaeidae | A family of moths | 30 | 721.1 | 734.5 | 796.0 |
| Cerambycidae | The family of longhorn beetles | 2 | 110.9 | 115.5 | 120.1 |
| Chalcidoidea | A superfamily of wasps | 2 | 419.9 | 423.2 | 426.6 |
| Chalcosiinae | A subfamily of moths | 271 | 396.0 | 431.0 | 469.0 |
| Charaxinae | A subfamily of butterflies | 67 | 368.3 | 428.3 | 504.3 |
| Coccinellidae | Ladybirds | 7 | 401.5 | 414.0 | 415.2 |
| Embioptera | Webspinners | 2 | 429.5 | 430.8 | 432.1 |
| Limacodidae | A family of moths | 4 | 410.5 | 417.0 | 423.7 |
| Lucanidae | The family of stag beetles | 240 | 214.2 | 435.4 | 471.9 |
| Lycaenidae | A large family of butterflies | 53 | 406.8 | 426.8 | 436.9 |
| Microscope slides | Benthic Foraminifera in a rock thin section | 105 | 378.1 | 404.5 | 433.2 |
| Microscope slides (large) | Benthic Foraminifera in a rock thin section | 13 | 378.3 | 387.8 | 408.4 |
| Mixed moths and butterflies | Mixed moths and butterflies collected in Madagascar | 2 | 440.5 | 613.4 | 786.4 |
| Mycalesina | A group of satyrid butterflies | 4 | 400.4 | 429.5 | 455.3 |
| Neuroptera | Lacewings and their relatives | 2 | 430.1 | 433.7 | 437.3 |
Fig 4Segmented image of moth specimens.
Example of a segmented image of Chalcosiinae (a subfamily of moths) specimens.
Fig 6Segmented image of microscope slides.
Example of a segmented image of microscope slides of benthic Foraminifera in a rock thin section.
Fig 7Segmented image containing overlapping specimens.
Example of segmented image of Mycalesina (a group of butterflies).