[FILM-Users 00374] Fwd: Definiens training course
film-service
film-service at imperial.ac.uk
Wed Jun 12 14:43:02 BST 2013
Dear microscopists,
we have now finalised the dates for the *Definiens Basic* training
course, it will take place *Tuesday-Thursday 1-3 OCTOBER 2013* in the
computer training rooms of the CENTRAL LIBRARY (first floor).
We have quite a few interests already, but a few more will fit in, so
if you want to take advantage of this discounted offer, please register
as soon as possible by email to <film-service at imperial.ac.uk
<mailto:film-service at imperial.ac.uk>> (places are assigned strictly by
registration date).
The *Definiens Advanced* training course will be organised a bit
later, probably around mid-November 2013. If you are interested in that
course as well, please also let us know now, because the content of that
training will depend on the needs of participants.
Good imaging,
Martin
-------- Original Message --------
Subject: Definiens training course
Date: Tue, 7 May 2013 16:42:35 +0100
From: Martin Spitaler <m.spitaler at imperial.ac.uk>
To: FILM-Users mailing list <film-users at imperial.ac.uk>
Dear microscopists,
I'm very pleased to let you know that we have recently been
successful with an application for the College's "equipment sharing
grant", and part of of the money will pay towards two training courses
for the powerful Definiens Developer XD software, one for beginners and
one for advanced users. This will mean that both training courses will
be available at a subsidised rate of probably ~£200-300 per participants
(rates still need to be finalised, also dependent on the number of
participants).
Many of you have already used the Definiens software for a range of
challenging image analysis tasks, from finding vesicles in noisy
confocal images to identifying cells in 3D datasets, multi-parameter
analysis of muscle fibres to immunological synapses. The power of the
software lies in the easy access to a large range of professional image
analysis and computer vision tools - with full control of all parameters
- and in a dedicated architecture for large-scale batch processing (the
largest dataset so far consisted of >30,000 images). It also contains
tools for cell tracking, fuzzy logics and machine learning, which might
be covered in the advanced course - this will depend on user demand.
Please let me know if you are interested in attending either of the
two training courses. And if you are not sure - if there is enough
interest to learn more about the software, we could use the May FILM
Club (31st of May) to give you an overview, based on projects in FILM.
Good imaging,
Martin
PS: other improvements covered by the Equipment Sharing Grant are
upgrades to our Widefield 2 microscope (64bit computer to deal with
larger data files for live imaging, RGB camera for histological
sections) and a new data processing server, which will allow processing
of much larger datasets
--
------------------------------------------------------------------------
*Martin Spitaler, PhD*
*FILM - Facility for Imaging by Light Microscopy*
- Facility Manager -
Sir Alexander Fleming Building, desk 401
Imperial College London / South Kensington
Exhibition Road
London SW7 2AZ
UK
Tel. +44-(0)20-759-42023
E-mail m.spitaler at imperial.ac.uk <mailto:m.spitaler at imperial.ac.uk>
Website: http://imperial.ac.uk/imagingfacility
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