Resolution Versus Error for Computational Electron Microscopy
Images that are collected via scanning transmission electron microscopy (STEM) can be undersampled to avoid damage to the specimen while maintaining resolution [1, 2]. We have used BPFA to impute missing data and reduce noise [3]. The reconstruction is typically evaluated using the peak signal-to-noise ratio (PSNR). This measure is too conservative for STEM images and we propose that the Fourier ring correlation (FRC) is used instead to evaluate the reconstruction. We are not concerned with exact reconstruction of the truth image, and therefore PSNR is a conservative estimation of the quality of the reconstruction. Instead, we are concerned with the visual resolution of the image and whether atoms can be distinguished. We have evaluated the reconstruction of a simulated STEM image using the FRC and compared the results with the PSNR measurements. The FRC captures the resolution of the image and is not affected by a large MSE if the atom peaks are still distinguishable. The noisy and reconstructed images are shown in Figure 1. The simulated STEM image was sampled at 100%, 80%, 40%, and 20% of the original pixels to simulate an undersampled scan. The reconstruction was done using BPFA with a patch size of 10 x 10 and no overlapping patches. Not having overlapping patches produces inferior results but they are still acceptable. The dictionary size is 64 and 30 iterations were completed during each reconstruction. The 100% image was denoised instead of reconstructed. Poisson noise was applied to the simulated image with λ values of 500, 50, and 5 to simulate lower imaging dose. The original simulated STEM image was also included in our calculations and was generated using a dose of 1000. The simulated STEM image is 100 by 100 pixels and has essentially no high frequency components. The image reconstruction tends to smooth the data, also resulting in no high frequency components. This causes the FRC of the two images to be large at higher resolutions and may be misleading. For this reason, the BPFA has no overlap to avoid excessive smoothing. Moreover, the resolution of the simulated image is approximately 9.2 (1/nm), so we only look that far in the frequency domain when performing FRC. If the FRC curve does not crossover the threshold, a resolution value of 9.2 is used. We emphasize that our reported results are conservative. The FRC and PSNR values using the ground truth and the reconstructed images are shown in Tables 1 and 2. The left side show the metrics without using BPFA (missing pixels) and the right side show the metrics after using BPFA. When we did not use BPFA, the Fourier transform was estimated [4]. Some threshold curves have been studied [5], but they are derived for additive noise models. Since we have a Poisson noise model, we have used the more conservative threshold of 0.5 for our calculations. Ten images were used to construct each cell of tables in the form of the mean of the metric plus or minus its standard deviation. As expected, the PSNR dies off much quicker than the FRC values for the same image. For the 100% and 80% sampled versions of the truth image, the resolution only dies off when the dose is 5. However, the PSNR dies off rapidly as the dose is reduced. For the 1000, 500, and 50 dose images, the FRC is the maximum, or close, until we undersample at 20%. The PSNR for these values tapers down as we get into the bottom right hand corner of the table, even though the resolution remains high. Overall, we find that undersampled images can be reconstructed to acceptable resolution even when the dose per pixel is also reduced[6]. References: [1]A Stevens, H Yang, L Carin et al. Microscopy 63(1), (2014), pp. 41. [2]A Stevens, L Kovarik, P Abellan et al. Advanced Structural and Chemical Imaging 1(1), (2015), pp. 1. [3]M Zhou, H Chen, J Paisley et al. Image Processing, IEEE Transactions on 21(1), (2012), pp. 130. [4]V. Y. Liepin’sh. Automatic control and computer sciences 30(3), (1996), pp. 20.
- Research Organization:
- Pacific Northwest National Lab. (PNNL), Richland, WA (United States)
- Sponsoring Organization:
- USDOE
- DOE Contract Number:
- AC05-76RL01830
- OSTI ID:
- 1379438
- Report Number(s):
- PNNL-SA-124092; applab
- Journal Information:
- Microscopy and Microanalysis, Vol. 23, Issue S1; ISSN 1431-9276
- Publisher:
- Microscopy Society of America (MSA)
- Country of Publication:
- United States
- Language:
- English
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