Abstract Background Traction Force Microscopy (TFM) is a widespread technique to estimate the tractions that cells exert on the surrounding substrate. To recover the tractions, it is necessary to solve an inverse problem, which is ill-posed and needs regularization to make the solution stable. The typical regularization scheme is given by the minimization of a cost functional, which is divided in two terms: the error present in the data or data fidelity term; and the regularization or penalty term. The classical approach is to use zero-order Tikhonov or L2-regularization, which uses the L2-norm for both terms in the cost function. Recently, some studies have demonstrated an improved performance using L1-regularization (L1-norm in the penalt...
AbstractCell adhesion and migration crucially depend on the transmission of actomyosin-generated for...
We present a reconstruction algorithm that resolves cellular tractions in diffraction-limited nascen...
<div><p>We introduce a novel three-dimensional (3D) traction force microscopy (TFM) method motivated...
Traction Force Microscopy (TFM) is a widespread technique to estimate the tractions that cells exert...
Traction Force Microscopy (TFM) is a commonly used technique to compute cellular tractions that cell...
Traction Force Microscopy (TFM) is a technique widely used to recover cellular tractions from the de...
Proceeding of: 2016 IEEE 13th International Symposium on Biomedical Imaging (ISBI). IEEE, Prague, 13...
Adherent cells exert traction forces on to their environment which allows them to migrate, to mainta...
Traction forces exerted by adherent cells are quantified using displacements of embedded markers on ...
Ten samples frames illustrating the whole TFM experiment and comparing the traction recovery with th...
As an emerging measurement technique in cell mechanics, cellular traction force microscopy has begun...
ABSTRACT Cell adhesion and migration crucially depend on the transmission of actomyosin-generated fo...
The traction exerted by a cell on the extra-cellular matrix (ECM) is critical to understanding and m...
This paper deals with the Traction Force Microscopy (TFM) problem. It consists in obtainin...
The tractions that cells exert on a gel substrate from the observed displacements is an increasingly...
AbstractCell adhesion and migration crucially depend on the transmission of actomyosin-generated for...
We present a reconstruction algorithm that resolves cellular tractions in diffraction-limited nascen...
<div><p>We introduce a novel three-dimensional (3D) traction force microscopy (TFM) method motivated...
Traction Force Microscopy (TFM) is a widespread technique to estimate the tractions that cells exert...
Traction Force Microscopy (TFM) is a commonly used technique to compute cellular tractions that cell...
Traction Force Microscopy (TFM) is a technique widely used to recover cellular tractions from the de...
Proceeding of: 2016 IEEE 13th International Symposium on Biomedical Imaging (ISBI). IEEE, Prague, 13...
Adherent cells exert traction forces on to their environment which allows them to migrate, to mainta...
Traction forces exerted by adherent cells are quantified using displacements of embedded markers on ...
Ten samples frames illustrating the whole TFM experiment and comparing the traction recovery with th...
As an emerging measurement technique in cell mechanics, cellular traction force microscopy has begun...
ABSTRACT Cell adhesion and migration crucially depend on the transmission of actomyosin-generated fo...
The traction exerted by a cell on the extra-cellular matrix (ECM) is critical to understanding and m...
This paper deals with the Traction Force Microscopy (TFM) problem. It consists in obtainin...
The tractions that cells exert on a gel substrate from the observed displacements is an increasingly...
AbstractCell adhesion and migration crucially depend on the transmission of actomyosin-generated for...
We present a reconstruction algorithm that resolves cellular tractions in diffraction-limited nascen...
<div><p>We introduce a novel three-dimensional (3D) traction force microscopy (TFM) method motivated...