Image quality metrics fail to accurately represent biological information in fluorescence microscopy

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Abstract

Image processing methods offer the potential to improve the quality of fluorescence microscopy data, allowing for image acquisition at lower, less phototoxic illumination doses. The training and evaluation of such methods is informed and driven by full-reference image quality metrics (IQMs); however, these metrics derive from applications to natural scene images, not fluorescence microscopy images. Here we investigate the response of IQMs to common properties of fluorescence microscopy data and whether IQMs are capable of reporting the biological information content of images. We find that IQM scores are biased by image content for both raw and processed microscopy data, and that improvements in IQM values reported after processing are not reliably correlated with performance in downstream analysis tasks. As common IQMs are unreliable proxies for guiding image processing developments in biological fluorescence microscopy, image processing performance should be benchmarked according to downstream analysis success.

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