A series of seminars for PhD Students held by dr Pasquale Memmolo
Computational microscopy is at the intersection of computer science and optics, and extends the capabilities
of the classical optical microscopy with the help of computation. In particular, the complexity of imaging
systems moves from the optical arrangements to the computational schemes, which mainly consists into the
smart manipulation of raw data to achieve high-quality imaging capabilities. Among label-free microscopies,
quantitative phase imaging is one of the most explored, as it encoded bio-physical information of imaged samples
through the measurement of the refractive index. Other computational microscopy technologies include superresolution
microscopy and Fourier Ptychographic microscopy in which the combination of the information of
several images, captured using optical diversity (e.g. multiple illumination orientations) forms an aggregated
2D or 3D image through iterative algorithms (e.g. phase retrieval) or machine learning. The PhD course is
organized in 5 lessons of 2 hours each available also online. The details of the lessons and their scheduling
follows. Both for the online and in-presence attendecy, the registration to the course is required by this link.
Date and Time
Location
Hosts
Registration
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- Catania, Sicilia
- Italy
Speakers
Institute of Applied Sciences & Intelligent Systems (CNR) Pozzuoli, Napoli
Principles of computational label-free microscopy
Biography:
Dr Pasquale Memmolo is a Senior Researcher at the Institute of Applied Sciences
and Intelligent Systems “Eduardo Caianiello” (ISASI-CNR, Italy). He holds a
Ph.D. in Electronic and Telecommunication Engineering from the University of
Naples “Federico II” and specializes in Computational Microscopy, ranging across
different topics including Digital Holography, Holographic Tomography, Fourier
Ptychographic Microscopy, Microfluidics, Optical Engineering, Advanced Image
Processing, Artificial Intelligence. He has authored or coauthored more than 100
articles in peer-reviewed journals and more than 200 conference papers.