Patterns (Jun 2020)

BIAFLOWS: A Collaborative Framework to Reproducibly Deploy and Benchmark Bioimage Analysis Workflows

  • Ulysse Rubens,
  • Romain Mormont,
  • Lassi Paavolainen,
  • Volker Bäcker,
  • Benjamin Pavie,
  • Leandro A. Scholz,
  • Gino Michiels,
  • Martin Maška,
  • Devrim Ünay,
  • Graeme Ball,
  • Renaud Hoyoux,
  • Rémy Vandaele,
  • Ofra Golani,
  • Stefan G. Stanciu,
  • Natasa Sladoje,
  • Perrine Paul-Gilloteaux,
  • Raphaël Marée,
  • Sébastien Tosi

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 1, no. 3
p. 100040

Abstract

Read online

Summary: Image analysis is key to extracting quantitative information from scientific microscopy images, but the methods involved are now often so refined that they can no longer be unambiguously described by written protocols. We introduce BIAFLOWS, an open-source web tool enabling to reproducibly deploy and benchmark bioimage analysis workflows coming from any software ecosystem. A curated instance of BIAFLOWS populated with 34 image analysis workflows and 15 microscopy image datasets recapitulating common bioimage analysis problems is available online. The workflows can be launched and assessed remotely by comparing their performance visually and according to standard benchmark metrics. We illustrated these features by comparing seven nuclei segmentation workflows, including deep-learning methods. BIAFLOWS enables to benchmark and share bioimage analysis workflows, hence safeguarding research results and promoting high-quality standards in image analysis. The platform is thoroughly documented and ready to gather annotated microscopy datasets and workflows contributed by the bioimaging community. The Bigger Picture: Image analysis is currently one of the major hurdles in the bioimaging chain, especially for large datasets. BIAFLOWS seeds the ground for virtual access to image analysis workflows running in high-performance computing environments. Providing a broader access to state-of-the-art image analysis is expected to have a strong impact on research in biology, and in other fields where image analysis is a critical step in extracting scientific results from images. BIAFLOWS could also be adopted as a federated platform to publish microscopy images together with the workflows that were used to extract scientific data from these images. This is a milestone of open science that will help to accelerate scientific progress by fostering collaborative practices.

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