Skip to main content

Modular visualization and analysis dashboard creation for high-resolution microscopy images.

Project description

fusion-tools

Modular visualization and analysis dashboard creation for high-resolution microscopy images.

Installation

fusion-tools is deployed through PyPI and can be installed using:

$ pip install fusion-tools

Usage

fusion-tools is intended to bring some of the functionality found in FUSION to developers working with whole slide images (WSIs) stored locally.

One such example would be the Visualization and SlideMap class:

from fusion_tools.visualization import Visualization
from fusion_tools.components import SlideMap

vis_session = Visualization(
    local_slides = [path_to_slide]
    components = [
        [
            SlideMap()
        ]
    ]
)

vis_session.start()

The Visualization class lets users construct custom layouts of different tools by passing a list containing rows, columns, and tabs. (e.g. [ [column in row 1], [ [ tab 1 in column 2 in row 1, tab 2 in column 2 in row 1] ], [ [ column 1 in row 2 ] ] ] ).

By passing a list of paths to locally-stored whole slide images (WSIs), fusion-tools automatically generates a LocalTileServer which is bundled in with the Visualization session to allow for high-resolution image viewing.

from fusion_tools.visualization import Visualization
from fusion_tools.components import SlideMap, OverlayOptions, PropertyViewer
from fusion_tools.utils.shapes import load_aperio


path_to_slide = '/path/to/wsi.svs'
path_to_annotations = '/path/to/aperio_annotations.xml'

annotations = load_aperio(path_to_annotations)

vis_session = Visualization(
    local_slides = [path_to_slide],
    local_annotations = [annotations],
    components = [
        [
            SlideMap(),
            [
                OverlayOptions(),
                PropertyViewer()
            ]
        ]
    ]
)

vis_session.start()

You can also access remote tile servers (either through DSATileServer or CustomTileServer) as well as annotations stored on a Digital Slide Archive instance.

from fusion_tools.visualization import Visualization
from fusion_tools.handler.dsa_handler import DSAHandler
from fusion_tools.components import SlideMap

# Grabbing first item from demo DSA instance
base_url = 'https://demo.kitware.com/histomicstk/api/v1'
item_id = '5bbdeed1e629140048d01bcb'

# Starting the DSAHandler to grab information:
dsa_handler = DSAHandler(
    girderApiUrl = base_url
)

# Checking how many annotations this item has:
#print('This item has the following annotations: ')
#print(dsa_handler.query_annotation_count(item=item_id).to_dict('records'))

vis_session = Visualization(
    tileservers = [dsa_handler.get_tile_server(item_id)],
    components = [
        [
            SlideMap()
        ]
    ]
)

vis_session.start()

You can also use some of segmentation components for adding labels and annotations to structures in the slide.

Creating annotations on top of structures

Applying labels to many structures at the same time

from fusion_tools.visualization import Visualization
from fusion_tools.handler.dsa_handler import DSAHandler
from fusion_tools.components import SlideMap, FeatureAnnotation, BulkLabels

# Grabbing first item from demo DSA instance
base_url = 'https://demo.kitware.com/histomicstk/api/v1'
item_id = '5bbdeed1e629140048d01bcb'

# Starting the DSAHandler to grab information:
dsa_handler = DSAHandler(
    girderApiUrl = base_url
)

# Checking how many annotations this item has:
#print('This item has the following annotations: ')
#print(dsa_handler.query_annotation_count(item=item_id).to_dict('records'))

vis_session = Visualization(
    tileservers = [dsa_handler.get_tile_server(item_id)],
    components = [
        [
            SlideMap(),
            [
                FeatureAnnotation(
                    storage_path = os.getcwd()+'\\tests\\Test_Annotations\\',
                    labels_format = 'json',
                    annotations_format = 'rgb'
                ),
                BulkLabels()
            ]
        ]
    ]
)

vis_session.start()

New in fusion-tools>2.0.0!

Now you can add multiple slides to a single visualization session and you can even view them side-by-side!

  • By default, components in the same row are linked, or they can interact with each other through callbacks. This can be updated using the "linkage" kwarg when initializing a Visualization session.
  • If two of the same types of components (e.g., two SlideMap components) are placed in the same row and "linkage" is set to "row", callbacks will not work. Beware!
from fusion_tools.visualization import Visualization
from fusion_tools.components import SlideMap, OverlayOptions, PropertyViewer, PropertyPlotter
from fusion_tools.handler.dsa_handler import DSAHandler

# Mixed types of slides and annotations
local_slide_list = ['slide1.tif','slide2.ome.tif','slide3.svs']
local_annotations_list = ['slide1_annotations.xml','slide2 annotations.json','annotations for slide3.h5ad']

dsa_handler = DSAHandler(
    girderApiUrl = 'http://example_dsa_address.com/api/v1'
)

dsa_items_list = [
    'item_uuid_1',
    'item_uuid_2'
]

dsa_tileservers = [dsa_handler.get_tile_server(i) for i in dsa_items_list]

# Setting linkage to "col" to enable side-by-side visualization
vis_sess = Visualization(
    local_slides = local_slide_list,
    local_annotations = local_annotations_list,
    tileservers = dsa_tileservers,
    linkage = 'col',
    components = [
        [
            [
                SlideMap(),
                OverlayOptions(),
                PropertyViewer(),
                PropertyPlotter()
            ],            
            [
                SlideMap(),
                OverlayOptions(),
                PropertyViewer(),
                PropertyPlotter()
            ]
        ]
    ],
    app_options={'port': 8050}
)

vis_sess.start()

Examples:

For more examples including how to load specific types of spatial --omics datasets (10x Visium, VisiumHD, MxIF, etc.) see this dedicated example page:

https://spborder.github.io/fusion-welcome-page/

Contributing

Open to contributions. Feel free to submit a PR or post feature requests in Issues

Open Projects:

  • Automated segmentation workflow for locally stored images (active-learning, SAM, etc.)
  • Monitoring long-running model training/other external processes

License

fusion-tools was created by Samuel Border. It is licensed under the terms of the Apache 2.0 License

Citation

If you find this work useful in your own research, please consider citing:

@article{border2025fusion,
  title={FUSION: A web-based application for in-depth exploration of multi-omics data with brightfield histology},
  author={Border, Samuel P and Ferreira, Ricardo Melo and Lucarelli, Nicholas and Kumar, Suhas Katari Chaluva and Paul, Anindya S and Manthey, David and Barisoni, Laura and Levites Strekalova, Yulia A and Ray, Jessica and Cheng, Ying-Hua and others},
  journal={Nature Communications},
  volume={16},
  number={1},
  pages={8388},
  year={2025},
  publisher={Nature Publishing Group UK London}
}

Project details


Release history Release notifications | RSS feed

Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distribution

fusion_tools-3.6.86.tar.gz (251.2 kB view details)

Uploaded Source

Built Distribution

If you're not sure about the file name format, learn more about wheel file names.

fusion_tools-3.6.86-py3-none-any.whl (271.8 kB view details)

Uploaded Python 3

File details

Details for the file fusion_tools-3.6.86.tar.gz.

File metadata

  • Download URL: fusion_tools-3.6.86.tar.gz
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 251.2 kB
  • Tags: Source
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: poetry/2.1.3 CPython/3.12.3 Linux/6.8.0-87-generic

File hashes

Hashes for fusion_tools-3.6.86.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 c1783cd35259d8f7f05348c242137fabb879990199c532f191184b58e7dad58c
MD5 0218b8c9a5887dc8bcc5564eecf95619
BLAKE2b-256 940ef1ec810c7431e4a89db5a8856bd6089cd90f90819db90b3342908944fea0

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file fusion_tools-3.6.86-py3-none-any.whl.

File metadata

  • Download URL: fusion_tools-3.6.86-py3-none-any.whl
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 271.8 kB
  • Tags: Python 3
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: poetry/2.1.3 CPython/3.12.3 Linux/6.8.0-87-generic

File hashes

Hashes for fusion_tools-3.6.86-py3-none-any.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 1fc777182a7be931856d2451131bf400fb45aec099bc40c66487fe4547fe387b
MD5 a1f3cd42633f3b83397b33a79d9a6e03
BLAKE2b-256 3e5a6ca41e973c4dc0417f2dbbaaeb70534b868a0da4cb813719643514257011

See more details on using hashes here.

Supported by

AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Monitoring Depot Continuous Integration Fastly CDN Google Download Analytics Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Error logging StatusPage Status page