Difference between revisions of "Converting microarray images"

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[[Category:Microarray]]
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Microarray images are generally stored as 16-bit [[Wikipedia:TIFF|TIFF]] images (usually around 100Mb in size. An alternative lossy image format is [[wikipedia:JPEG|JPEG]] format, which is still bloated at around 40Mb filesize. Investigating the image size of a typical GenePix derived JPEG image, the pixel size is 4400 × 14300 pixels (72 pixels per inch) with an aspect ratio of 3.25 . A general visual summary of these lossy images is all that is required where they could be converted to a much smaller thumbnail [[Wikipedia:PNG|PNG]] type image using an appropriate program such as [[Wikipedia:ImageMagick|ImageMagick]] or [[Wikipedia:GIMP|Gimp]] which allows batch processing of multiple images a once.
 
Microarray images are generally stored as 16-bit [[Wikipedia:TIFF|TIFF]] images (usually around 100Mb in size. An alternative lossy image format is [[wikipedia:JPEG|JPEG]] format, which is still bloated at around 40Mb filesize. Investigating the image size of a typical GenePix derived JPEG image, the pixel size is 4400 × 14300 pixels (72 pixels per inch) with an aspect ratio of 3.25 . A general visual summary of these lossy images is all that is required where they could be converted to a much smaller thumbnail [[Wikipedia:PNG|PNG]] type image using an appropriate program such as [[Wikipedia:ImageMagick|ImageMagick]] or [[Wikipedia:GIMP|Gimp]] which allows batch processing of multiple images a once.
  

Revision as of 01:35, 6 September 2006


Microarray images are generally stored as 16-bit TIFF images (usually around 100Mb in size. An alternative lossy image format is JPEG format, which is still bloated at around 40Mb filesize. Investigating the image size of a typical GenePix derived JPEG image, the pixel size is 4400 × 14300 pixels (72 pixels per inch) with an aspect ratio of 3.25 . A general visual summary of these lossy images is all that is required where they could be converted to a much smaller thumbnail PNG type image using an appropriate program such as ImageMagick or Gimp which allows batch processing of multiple images a once.


See also