The contrast, color, and sharpness of each image were adjusted to at least maintain the appearance of the tissue as seen through a microscope. Large tissues are up to 34 GB for a single, uncompressed image of 150,000 x 75,000 pixels.
Histology Guide solves this problem by recreating the look and feel of a microscope in an intuitive, browser-based interface.Īn Aperio slide scanner was used to obtain a high-resolution image of each slide in its entirety. This is unfortunate because no matter how good the few images in a textbook or histology atlas are, they cannot replace the experience of viewing a specimen through a microscope. A histology atlas is frequently used as a replacement.
Rather than reproducing the information found in a histology textbook, a user is shown how to apply this knowledge to interpret cells and tissues as viewed through a microscope.īecause of the high cost of purchasing (and maintaining) microscopes and preparing (or purchasing) slide collections, histology is often taught today without laboratories. Histology Guide teaches the visual art of recognizing the structure of cells and tissues and understanding how this is determined by their function. It examines the correlation between structure and function. Histology is the study of the microanatomy of cells, tissues, and organs as seen through a microscope.