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Creators/Authors contains: "Karmarkar, Bhas"

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  1. Tracking microrobots is challenging, considering their minute size and high speed. As the field progresses towards developing microrobots for biomedical applications and conducting mechanistic studies in physiologically relevant media (e.g., collagen), this challenge is exacerbated by the dense surrounding environments with feature size and shape comparable to microrobots. Herein, we report Motion Enhanced Multi-level Tracker (MEMTrack), a robust pipeline for detecting and tracking microrobots using synthetic motion features, deep learning-based object detection, and a modified Simple Online and Real-time Tracking (SORT) algorithm with interpolation for tracking. Our object detection approach combines different models based on the object's motion pattern. We trained and validated our model using bacterial micro-motors in collagen (tissue phantom) and tested it in collagen and aqueous media. We demonstrate that MEMTrack accurately tracks even the most challenging bacteria missed by skilled human annotators, achieving precision and recall of 77% and 48% in collagen and 94% and 35% in liquid media, respectively. Moreover, we show that MEMTrack can quantify average bacteria speed with no statistically significant difference from the laboriously-produced manual tracking data. MEMTrack represents a significant contribution to microrobot localization and tracking, and opens the potential for vision-based deep learning approaches to microrobot control in dense and low-contrast settings. All source code for training and testing MEMTrack and reproducing the results of the paper have been made publicly available this https URL. 
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  2. Studying bacteria motility is crucial to understanding and controlling biomedical and ecological phenomena involving bacteria. Tracking bacteria in complex environments such as polysaccharides (agar) or protein (collagen) hydrogels is a challenging task due to the lack of visually distinguishable features between bacteria and surrounding environment, making state-of-the-art methods for tracking easily recognizable objects such as pedestrians and cars unsuitable for this application. We propose a novel pipeline for detecting and tracking bacteria in bright-field microscopy videos involving bacteria in complex backgrounds. Our pipeline uses motion-based features and combines multiple models for detecting bacteria of varying difficulty levels. We apply multiple filters to prune false positive detections, and then use the SORT tracking algorithm with interpolation in case of missing detections. Our results demonstrate that our pipeline can accurately track hard-to-detect bacteria, achieving a high precision and recall. 
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  3. Tracking microrobots is challenging due to their minute size and high speed. In biomedical applications, this challenge is exacerbated by the dense surrounding environments with feature sizes and shapes comparable to microrobots. Herein, Motion Enhanced Multi‐level Tracker (MEMTrack) is introduced for detecting and tracking microrobots in dense and low‐contrast environments. Informed by the physics of microrobot motion, synthetic motion features for deep learning‐based object detection and a modified Simple Online and Real‐time Tracking (SORT)algorithm with interpolation are used for tracking. MEMTrack is trained and tested using bacterial micromotors in collagen (tissue phantom), achieving precision and recall of 76% and 51%, respectively. Compared to the state‐of‐the‐art baseline models, MEMTrack provides a minimum of 2.6‐fold higher precision with a reasonably high recall. MEMTrack's generalizability to unseen (aqueous) media and its versatility in tracking microrobots of different shapes, sizes, and motion characteristics are shown. Finally, it is shown that MEMTrack localizes objects with a root‐mean‐square error of less than 1.84 μm and quantifies the average speed of all tested systems with no statistically significant difference from the laboriously produced manual tracking data. MEMTrack significantly advances microrobot localization and tracking in dense and low‐contrast settings and can impact fundamental and translational microrobotic research. 
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