George McNamara |
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To join, leave or search the confocal microscopy listserv, go to: http://lists.umn.edu/cgi-bin/wa?A0=confocalmicroscopy ***** Dear Confocal listserv, If anyone is aware of an ImageJ plugin for Number and Molecular brightness (N&B) Method, could you please post the link here? An explanation of N&B can be found in http://www.lfd.uci.edu/workshop/2010/files/LFDWorkshop2010-Lecture05.pdf as well as various papers by Digman, Gratton et al. (page 33 of the pdf file). If there is one, could someone please write one in time for me to use for a CW-STED demo Aug 22-Sept 6? If you are feeling ambitious, Cross N&B would be great to have, too. The pdf is not explicit, but usually 100 images are acquired. Figure on calculating from a stack in ImageJ (two stacks for cross). I'll be happy to send you nice data to use in your publication announcing your plugin. You are welcome to visit Miami during the demo to acquire however you think is best - however, this is the rainy season (and I have no travel budget). I anticipate using the demo instrument's HyD detector in photon counting mode for most of this. thanks, George -- George McNamara, PhD Analytical Imaging Core Facility University of Miami |
George McNamara |
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To join, leave or search the confocal microscopy listserv, go to: http://lists.umn.edu/cgi-bin/wa?A0=confocalmicroscopy ***** Hi Jen and John, I did try SimFCS a couple of years ago. Limited to 256x256 pixels, which defaults to the top left corner (can be adjusted). Good to know that the fee goes to a useful cause. 256 pixels at 25 nm pixel size is not much of a field of view. Sincerely, George On 7/12/2011 1:56 AM, Jen Clarke wrote: > Hi George > > Enrico Gratton's "SimFCS" software does N&B analysis > They used to and probably still do do a 30 day free trial version, and the full version is sold at a very affordable price (was ~$2000 USD when we bought it 2 years ago) with funds raised going towards scholarships for people going to the Laboratory for Fluorescence Dynamics (LFD) for training. > > You should be able to find info on the software and lots of other fantastic bits of info at the LFD website > > Kind regards > Jen > -- > Jennifer Clarke BSc (Hons) PhD > Research Associate, Anatomy and Histology > Centre for Neuroscience, School of Medicine > & > Facility Manager, Optical Microscopy Suite, Flinders Microscopy > (training and assistance available on Mondays only) > > Flinders University > GPO Box 2100, Adelaide 5001 > Phone: 61 8 8204 6454/ 61 8 8204 6637 > Email: [hidden email] > ________________________________________ > From: Confocal Microscopy List [[hidden email]] On Behalf Of George McNamara [[hidden email]] > Sent: Tuesday, 12 July 2011 12:34 PM > To: [hidden email] > Subject: ImageJ plugin for Number and Molecular brightness (N&B) Method? > > ***** > To join, leave or search the confocal microscopy listserv, go to: > http://lists.umn.edu/cgi-bin/wa?A0=confocalmicroscopy > ***** > > Dear Confocal listserv, > > If anyone is aware of an ImageJ plugin for Number and Molecular > brightness (N&B) Method, could you please post the link here? > > An explanation of N&B can be found in > http://www.lfd.uci.edu/workshop/2010/files/LFDWorkshop2010-Lecture05.pdf > as well as various papers by Digman, Gratton et al. (page 33 of the pdf > file). > > If there is one, could someone please write one in time for me to use > for a CW-STED demo Aug 22-Sept 6? > > If you are feeling ambitious, Cross N&B would be great to have, too. The > pdf is not explicit, but usually 100 images are acquired. Figure on > calculating from a stack in ImageJ (two stacks for cross). I'll be happy > to send you nice data to use in your publication announcing your plugin. > You are welcome to visit Miami during the demo to acquire however you > think is best - however, this is the rainy season (and I have no travel > budget). I anticipate using the demo instrument's HyD detector in photon > counting mode for most of this. > > > thanks, > > George > > > -- > > > George McNamara, PhD > Analytical Imaging Core Facility > University of Miami > > -- George McNamara, PhD Analytical Imaging Core Facility University of Miami |
Michelle Digman |
In reply to this post by George McNamara
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To join, leave or search the confocal microscopy listserv, go to: http://lists.umn.edu/cgi-bin/wa?A0=confocalmicroscopy ***** Dear George, I don't know if anyone has an image J plugin for the N&B analysis. However Jay Unruh from Stowers has a collection of image J plugins for FCS, CCRICS, RICS and PCH. Here is a link to those plugins: http://research.stowers.org/imagejplugins/zipped_plugins.html The SIMFCS software can be used for N&B analysis. If you are interested you can download the software from: http://www.lfd.uci.edu/globals/ We can send you tutorials on how to use the program for the N&B analysis. Kind regards, Michelle ******************************* Michelle Digman, Ph.D. University of California, Irvine Laboratory for Fluorescence Dynamics 3204 Natural Sciences II (949) 824-2992 http://www.lfd.uci.edu/ > ***** > To join, leave or search the confocal microscopy listserv, go to: > http://lists.umn.edu/cgi-bin/wa?A0=confocalmicroscopy > ***** > > Dear Confocal listserv, > > If anyone is aware of an ImageJ plugin for Number and Molecular > brightness (N&B) Method, could you please post the link here? > > An explanation of N&B can be found in > http://www.lfd.uci.edu/workshop/2010/files/LFDWorkshop2010-Lecture05.pdf > as well as various papers by Digman, Gratton et al. (page 33 of the pdf > file). > > If there is one, could someone please write one in time for me to use > for a CW-STED demo Aug 22-Sept 6? > > If you are feeling ambitious, Cross N&B would be great to have, too. The > pdf is not explicit, but usually 100 images are acquired. Figure on > calculating from a stack in ImageJ (two stacks for cross). I'll be happy > to send you nice data to use in your publication announcing your plugin. > You are welcome to visit Miami during the demo to acquire however you > think is best - however, this is the rainy season (and I have no travel > budget). I anticipate using the demo instrument's HyD detector in photon > counting mode for most of this. > > > thanks, > > George > > > -- > > > George McNamara, PhD > Analytical Imaging Core Facility > University of Miami > > |
George McNamara |
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To join, leave or search the confocal microscopy listserv, go to: http://lists.umn.edu/cgi-bin/wa?A0=confocalmicroscopy ***** Hi Michelle, Thanks! Jay Unruh's http://research.stowers.org/imagejplugins/ PCH page ( http://research.stowers.org/imagejplugins/pch_plugins.html ) indicates the PCH analysis includes N&B: A quick glance at our page on PCH <http://research.stowers-institute.org/microscopy/external/Technology/PCH/index.html> reveals that there are three ways to obtain molecular brightness information: 1.) from the amplitude of the FCS curve itself, 2.) from "moment analysis" also known as N&B analysis, and 3.) from PCH analysis. So which method should be used to obtain the molecular brightness? The answer depends on the application. If the data has been obtained from a single point measurement, the answer is almost always to determine the brightness from a fit of the FCS curve. I recommend this because this method allows for visual inspection of the quality of the fit given the expected diffusion profile of the sample under study. In addition, this allows for rejection or detrending of curves which show bleaching or slow dynamics like cell motion. Of course, one can always divide the curve up into many small sections and perform N&B analysis, but it can be difficult to decide how large to make these sections. These issues are also prevalent in PCH analysis. Once bleaching is involved, the PCH curve becomes a convolution of all possible average concentration values present throughout the aquisition. In addition, both N&B and PCH contain complex corrections for detector afterpulsing and triplet blinking that are typically not present in fitting software (including mine). So when should N&B analysis be used? There are several circumstances under which FCS cannot be used. These include circumstances under which samples are not obtained in a continuous stream (e.g. images). Here the diffusion time is much smaller than the time between frames, but much larger than the pixel dwell time. Here FCS will not work, but N&B will. Note that it may be useful to try RICS analysis for this circumstance as well. In addition, the simplicity of the N&B analysis makes it useful for simplistic analysis of many samples when automated fitting is not trivial. Finally, when should PCH analysis be used? The major advantage and disadvantage of the PCH method is its ability to represent complexity in the sample. One must be careful not to "overfit" the PCH curve to represent more complexity than is justified in a noisy curve. Nevertheless, with high quality data, one can obtain information about multiple species in a sample. In addition, it can be much more straightforward to assess the error limits on parameters from PCH data as opposed to N&B analysis (typically requires the use of factorial cumulants). In addition, multispecies N&B models for multicolor analysis can become quite complex while 2D PCH retains a simplicity that allows for straightforward model testing. http://research.stowers-institute.org/microscopy/external/Technology/PCH/index.html#NBBright I will check it out. Sincerely, George On 7/15/2011 3:01 PM, [hidden email] wrote: > ***** > To join, leave or search the confocal microscopy listserv, go to: > http://lists.umn.edu/cgi-bin/wa?A0=confocalmicroscopy > ***** > > Dear George, > I don't know if anyone has an image J plugin for the N&B analysis. However > Jay Unruh from Stowers has a collection of image J plugins for FCS, > CCRICS, RICS and PCH. Here is a link to those plugins: > http://research.stowers.org/imagejplugins/zipped_plugins.html > > The SIMFCS software can be used for N&B analysis. If you are interested > you can download the software from: http://www.lfd.uci.edu/globals/ > > We can send you tutorials on how to use the program for the N&B analysis. > Kind regards, > Michelle > > ******************************* > Michelle Digman, Ph.D. > University of California, Irvine > Laboratory for Fluorescence Dynamics > 3204 Natural Sciences II > (949) 824-2992 > http://www.lfd.uci.edu/ > > > > > >> ***** >> To join, leave or search the confocal microscopy listserv, go to: >> http://lists.umn.edu/cgi-bin/wa?A0=confocalmicroscopy >> ***** >> >> Dear Confocal listserv, >> >> If anyone is aware of an ImageJ plugin for Number and Molecular >> brightness (N&B) Method, could you please post the link here? >> >> An explanation of N&B can be found in >> http://www.lfd.uci.edu/workshop/2010/files/LFDWorkshop2010-Lecture05.pdf >> as well as various papers by Digman, Gratton et al. (page 33 of the pdf >> file). >> >> If there is one, could someone please write one in time for me to use >> for a CW-STED demo Aug 22-Sept 6? >> >> If you are feeling ambitious, Cross N&B would be great to have, too. The >> pdf is not explicit, but usually 100 images are acquired. Figure on >> calculating from a stack in ImageJ (two stacks for cross). I'll be happy >> to send you nice data to use in your publication announcing your plugin. >> You are welcome to visit Miami during the demo to acquire however you >> think is best - however, this is the rainy season (and I have no travel >> budget). I anticipate using the demo instrument's HyD detector in photon >> counting mode for most of this. >> >> >> thanks, >> >> George >> >> >> -- >> >> >> George McNamara, PhD >> Analytical Imaging Core Facility >> University of Miami >> >> >> > -- George McNamara, PhD Analytical Imaging Core Facility University of Miami |
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