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Should these images be produced always or only at the user's request? Tentative answer: only if requested. Incrementally they are very little computational effort; however, including them means that three images are produced rather than just one, and that could be a lot of memory.
Should the normalized image always be produced, or only the two new optional images if that is what the user requests? Tentative answer: let the user decide. Saving the output memory may be valuable to the user.
If the user requests only the two new images, should they be numbered output[0] and output[1] or, alternatively, output[1] and output[2], with the latter case reflecting that the originally supported output[0] is missing from this set of output images. Tentative answer is: output[0] and output[1].
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered:
Is implemented as a distinct filter, StructurePreservingColorSeparationFilter.
Accepts a single input image, but no reference image. That is, no color normalization is performed; if that is desired too, use the StructurePreservingColorNormalizationFilter first.
Produces two output images. The first shows hematoxylin only; that is, it shows what would happen if no eosin stain had been applied. The second output image is vice-versa.
Has much of it implementation via the methods within StructurePreservingColorNormalizationFilter.
This interface is simpler than exposing both functionalities within a single filter. The price is that there will be some redundant computations in the situation that the user wants both color normalization and color separation.
This issue is motivated by https://discourse.itk.org/t/itk-error-hematoxylin-and-eosin-are-getting-mixed-up-failed/4767/36
To be determined:
output[0]
andoutput[1]
or, alternatively,output[1]
andoutput[2]
, with the latter case reflecting that the originally supportedoutput[0]
is missing from this set of output images. Tentative answer is:output[0]
andoutput[1]
.The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: