TY - JOUR
T1 - EPiK-A workflow for electron tomography in Kepler
AU - Chen, Ruijuan
AU - Wan, Xiaohua
AU - Altintas, Ilkay
AU - Wang, Jianwu
AU - Crawl, Daniel
AU - Phan, Sébastien
AU - Lawrence, Albert
AU - Ellisman, Mark
PY - 2014
Y1 - 2014
N2 - Scientific workflows integrate data and computing interfaces as configurable, semiautomatic graphs to solve a scientific problem. Kepler is such a software system for designing, executing, reusing, evolving, archiving and sharing scientific workflows. Electron tomography (ET) enables high-resolution views of complex cellular structures, such as cytoskeletons, organelles, viruses and chromosomes. Imaging investigations produce large datasets. For instance, in Electron Tomography, the size of a 16 fold image tilt series is about 65 Gigabytes with each projection image including 4096 by 4096 pixels. When we use serial sections or montage technique for large field ET, the dataset will be even larger. For higher resolution images with multiple tilt series, the data size may be in terabyte range. Demands of mass data processing and complex algorithms require the integration of diverse codes into flexible software structures. This paper describes a workflow for Electron Tomography Programs in Kepler (EPiK). This EPiK workflow embeds the tracking process of IMOD, and realizes the main algorithms including filtered backprojection (FBP) from TxBR and iterative reconstruction methods. We have tested the three dimensional (3D) reconstruction process using EPiK on ET data. EPiK can be a potential toolkit for b iology researchers with the advantage of logical viewing, easy handling, convenient sharing and future extensibility.
AB - Scientific workflows integrate data and computing interfaces as configurable, semiautomatic graphs to solve a scientific problem. Kepler is such a software system for designing, executing, reusing, evolving, archiving and sharing scientific workflows. Electron tomography (ET) enables high-resolution views of complex cellular structures, such as cytoskeletons, organelles, viruses and chromosomes. Imaging investigations produce large datasets. For instance, in Electron Tomography, the size of a 16 fold image tilt series is about 65 Gigabytes with each projection image including 4096 by 4096 pixels. When we use serial sections or montage technique for large field ET, the dataset will be even larger. For higher resolution images with multiple tilt series, the data size may be in terabyte range. Demands of mass data processing and complex algorithms require the integration of diverse codes into flexible software structures. This paper describes a workflow for Electron Tomography Programs in Kepler (EPiK). This EPiK workflow embeds the tracking process of IMOD, and realizes the main algorithms including filtered backprojection (FBP) from TxBR and iterative reconstruction methods. We have tested the three dimensional (3D) reconstruction process using EPiK on ET data. EPiK can be a potential toolkit for b iology researchers with the advantage of logical viewing, easy handling, convenient sharing and future extensibility.
KW - EPiK
KW - Electron tomography
KW - Kepler
KW - Scientific workflows
KW - TxBR
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84902825658&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.procs.2014.05.214
DO - 10.1016/j.procs.2014.05.214
M3 - Conference article
AN - SCOPUS:84902825658
SN - 1877-0509
VL - 29
SP - 2295
EP - 2305
JO - Procedia Computer Science
JF - Procedia Computer Science
T2 - 14th Annual International Conference on Computational Science, ICCS 2014
Y2 - 10 June 2014 through 12 June 2014
ER -