An objective comparison of cell-tracking algorithms.
Vladimír UlmanMartin MaškaKlas E G MagnussonOlaf RonnebergerCarsten HauboldNathalie HarderPavel MatulaPetr MatulaDavid SvobodaMiroslav RadojevicIhor SmalKarl RohrJoakim JaldénHelen M BlauOleh DzyubachykBoudewijn LelieveldtPengdong XiaoYuexiang LiSiu-Yeung ChoAlexandre C DufourJean-Christophe Olivo-MarinConstantino C Reyes-AldasoroJose A Solis-LemusRobert BenschThomas BroxJohannes StegmaierRalf MikutSteffen WolfFred A HamprechtTiago EstevesPedro QuelhasÖmer DemirelLars MalmströmFlorian JugPavel TomancakErik MeijeringArrate Munoz BarrutiaMichal KozubekCarlos Ortiz de SolórzanoPublished in: Nature methods (2017)
We present a combined report on the results of three editions of the Cell Tracking Challenge, an ongoing initiative aimed at promoting the development and objective evaluation of cell segmentation and tracking algorithms. With 21 participating algorithms and a data repository consisting of 13 data sets from various microscopy modalities, the challenge displays today's state-of-the-art methodology in the field. We analyzed the challenge results using performance measures for segmentation and tracking that rank all participating methods. We also analyzed the performance of all of the algorithms in terms of biological measures and practical usability. Although some methods scored high in all technical aspects, none obtained fully correct solutions. We found that methods that either take prior information into account using learning strategies or analyze cells in a global spatiotemporal video context performed better than other methods under the segmentation and tracking scenarios included in the challenge.