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Microscopy as a statistical, Renyi-Ulam, half-lie game: a new heuristic search strategy to accelerate imaging

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posted on 2024-11-23, 06:47 authored by Daniel DrummDaniel Drumm, Andrew GreentreeAndrew Greentree
Finding a fluorescent target in a biological environment is a common and pressing microscopy problem. This task is formally analogous to the canonical search problem. In ideal (noise-free, truthful) search problems, the well-known binary search is optimal. The case of half-lies, where one of two responses to a search query may be deceptive, introduces a richer, Renyi-Ulam problem and is particularly relevant to practical microscopy. We analyse microscopy in the contexts of Renyi-Ulam games and half-lies, developing a new family of heuristics. We show the cost of insisting on verification by positive result in search algorithms; for the zero-half-lie case bisectioning with verification incurs a 50% penalty in the average number of queries required. The optimal partitioning of search spaces directly following verification in the presence of random half-lies is determined. Trisectioning with verification is shown to be the most efficient heuristic of the family in a majority of cases.

History

Journal

Scientific Reports

Volume

7

Number

14652

Start page

1

End page

13

Total pages

13

Publisher

Nature Publishing Group

Place published

United Kingdom

Language

English

Copyright

© The Author(s) 2017. Creative Common Attribution 4.0 International License.

Former Identifier

2006079728

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2017-12-04

Open access

  • Yes

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