2 results match your criteria: "Department of Clinical Neuroscience and Department of Otolaryngology[Affiliation]"

A method for three-dimensional motion analysis designed for live cell imaging by fluorescence confocal microscopy is described. The approach is based on optical flow computation and takes into account brightness variations in the image scene that are not due to motion, such as photobleaching or fluorescence variations that may reflect changes in cellular physiology. The 3-D optical flow algorithm allowed almost perfect motion estimation on noise-free artificial sequences, and performed with a relative error of <10% on noisy images typical of real experiments.

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A digital heterodyne laser interferometer for studying cochlear mechanics.

J Neurosci Methods

May 2009

Karolinska Institutet, Center for Hearing and Communication Research, Department of Clinical Neuroscience and Department of Otolaryngology, M1 Karolinska University Hospital, SE-17176 Stockholm, Sweden.

Laser interferometry is the technique of choice for studying the smallest displacements of the hearing organ. For low intensity sound stimulation, these displacements may be below 1 nm. This cannot be reliably measured with other presently available techniques in an intact organ of Corti.

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