Image Processing & Correction

Stitching

Tiles into a slide — aligning, blending, registering across the seams

Definition
Stitching is the process of combining multiple acquisition tiles (FOVsLoading...) into a single composite image. The simplest case is encoded stitching: the microscope stage records its position for each tile, and the stitcher places each tile at its recorded position. When stage encoders are accurate, this works directly. Non-encoded (or content-based) stitching computes overlap correlations between adjacent tiles and aligns them by image content — useful when stage positions aren't recorded or aren't accurate enough. Z-position stitching handles the additional axis: tiles acquired at different focal depths are aligned in z before lateral combination, producing a focus-corrected mosaic. Correlative stitching aligns tiles from different acquisitions of the same field — for instance, fluorescence and brightfield of the same slide, or images from two different instruments — letting downstream analysis use information from both.
Supporting
Pre processing - Basic - Virtual Channel
Video · Supporting
User Interface - Image Viewer + Toolbar
Video · Supporting
Encoded vs non-encoded — where the position information comes from
Stage record, or image content
Z-position stitching keeps the mosaic in focus
Per-tile z-correction before lateral combination
Correlative stitching fuses different acquisitions
Two views of the same field, registered into one
Seams are where stitching shows itself
Illumination, exposure, focus differences across tile boundaries
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