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[[Image:Microscope with stained slide.jpg|thumb|A stained histologic specimen, sandwiched between a glass [[microscope slide]] and coverslip, mounted on the stage of a light microscope.]]
[[Image:Emphysema H and E.jpg|thumb|Microscopic view of a histologic specimen of human [[lung]] tissue stained with [[hematoxylin]] and [[eosin]].]]
'''Automated tissue image analysis''' or '''histopathology image analysis''' ('''HIMA''') is a process by which computer-controlled [[automatic test equipment]] is used to evaluate [[tissue (biology)|tissue]] samples, using computations to derive quantitative measurements from an image to avoid subjective errors.
In a typical application, automated tissue image analysis could be used to measure the aggregate activity of [[cancer cell]]s in a [[biopsy]] of a [[cancer]]ous [[tumor]] taken from a patient.
==Applications==
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{{cite journal
|title=A System for Automated Liver Tissue Image Analysis: Methods and Results
|author1=O'Gorman, Lawrence
|author2=Sanderson, Arthur C. |author3=Preston, Kendall |journal=IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering |date=September 1985
|volume=BME-32
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|issn=0018-9294
|doi=10.1109/TBME.1985.325587
|pmid=4054933
|s2cid=30050996
}}</ref>
{{cite
|title=Improved prediction of prostate cancer recurrence based on an automated tissue image analysis system▼
|author=Teverovskiy, M.▼
|author3= Junshui Ma▼
|author7= Ho-Yuen Pang▼
|pages=257–260 ▼
|volume=1▼
|isbn=0-7803-8388-5
|doi=10.1109/ISBI.2004.1398523
|citeseerx=10.1.1.58.9929
▲|
|title=2004 2nd IEEE International Symposium on Biomedical Imaging: Macro to Nano (IEEE Cat No. 04EX821)
|year=2004
|last2=Kumar |first2=V.
|last4=Kotsianti |first4=A.
|last5=Verbel |first5=D.
|last6=Tabesh |first6=A.
|last8=Vengrenyuk |first8=Y.
|last9=Fogarasi |first9=S.
|last10=Saidi |first10=O.
|s2cid=8724168
}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal
|journal
|volume
|issue
|date
|doi
|pmid
|issn
|pages
|title
|author1
|author2
|author3
|author4
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|s2cid=14673541
|url
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|url-status=dead
}}</ref> As it is a digital system, suitable for networking, it also facilitates cooperative efforts between distant sites.<ref>
{{cite journal
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|pages=49–58
|doi=10.1080/01926230490451734
|pmid=15503664
|doi-access=free}}</ref> Systems for automatically analyzing tissue samples also reduce costs and save time.<ref name="O'Gorman_1985"/>
High-performance [[Charge-coupled device|CCD cameras]] are used for acquiring the digital images. Coupled with advanced [[fluorescence microscope|widefield microscope]]s and various [[algorithms]] for [[Deconvolution#Optics and other imaging|image restoration]], this approach can provide better results than [[confocal microscope|confocal techniques]] at comparable speeds and lower costs.<ref name="Phukpattaranont_2007">
{{cite
|year=2007
|volume=15
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|doi=10.1007/978-3-540-68017-8_63
|title=An Automatic Cell Counting Method for a Microscopic Tissue Image from Breast Cancer
|author1=Pornchai Phukpattaranont |author2=Pleumjit Boonyaphiphat |
|isbn=978-3-540-68016-1}}</ref>
==Processes==
The [[United States of America|United States]] [[Food and Drug Administration]] classifies these systems as [[medical device]]s, under the general instrumentation category of [[automatic test equipment]].<ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=nEHLxh9wxZIC
ATIS have seven basic processes (sample preparation, image acquisition, image analysis, results reporting, data storage, network communication, and self-system diagnostics) and realization of these functions highly accurate hardware and well-integrated, complex, and expensive software.<ref>{{cite journal|doi=10.1016/j.aca.2005.11.083 |pmid=17723364 |title=Analytica Chimica Acta - Advances in cancer tissue microarray technology: Towards improved understanding and diagnostics
===Preparation===
Specimen preparation is critical for evaluating the tumor in the automated system.
===Acquisition===
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|volume=392
|issue=1–3
|pages=220–226
|journal=Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research Section A:
|date=February 1997
|doi=10.1016/S0168-9002(97)00297-0
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===Analysis===
[[Image analysis]] involves complex computer algorithms which identify and characterize cellular color, shape, and quantity of the tissue sample using image pattern recognition technology based on [[vector quantization]]. Vector representations of objects in the image, as opposed to bitmap representations, have superior zoom-in ability. Once the sample image has been acquired and resident in the computer's random access memory as a large array of 0's and 1's, a programmer knowledgeable in cellular architecture can develop deterministic [[algorithms]] applied to the entire memory space to detect cell patterns from previously defined cellular structures and formations known to be significant.<ref name="han12cell">{{cite journal| author=Han, J.W.| author2=Breckon, T.P.| author3=Randell, D.A.| author4=Landini, G.| title=The Application of Support Vector Machine Classification to Detect Cell Nuclei for Automated Microscopy| journal=Machine Vision and Applications| year=2012| volume=23| pages=15–24| publisher=Springer| doi=10.1007/s00138-010-0275-y| issue=1| s2cid=12446454}}</ref>
==
* [[Histopathology]]
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