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Computer assisted data collection for stereology: Rationale and description of point counting stereology (PCS) software

✍ Scribed by N. Dean Pentcheff; Robert P. Bolender


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1992
Tongue
English
Weight
778 KB
Volume
21
Category
Article
ISSN
1059-910X

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✦ Synopsis


The paper describes microcomputer software for point counting stereology. Stereology includes a collection of statistical methods that quantify the images of light and transmission electron microscopy. The methods use test grids placed over images to collect raw data, which includes counts of points, intersections, transections, and profiles. In turn, the counts are included in stereological equations that give estimates of compartmental volumes, surfaces, lengths, or numbers. These parameters describe the composition of a structure in three-dimensional space. The PCS (point counting stereology) System Software I11 serves as a data collection, storage, and management tool. Users set up point counting protocols without programming, enter data by pressing predefined function (MS-DOS) or alphabetic keys (UNIX), store data in files, select files for analysis, and calculate results as stereological densities. The latest version of the PCS software includes a new user interface and is designed as a research "front end" that can feed data either into the calculation tools of a stereology tutorial (Bolender, 1992, this issue) or into the analysis routines of quantitative morphology databases (Bolender and Bluhm, 1992). o 1992 Wiley-Liss, Inc.