Neural network processing of holographic images

HOLODEC, an airborne cloud particle imager, captures holographic images of a fixed volume of cloud to characterize the types and sizes of cloud particles, such as water droplets and ice crystals. Cloud particle properties include position, diameter, and shape. In this work we evaluate the potential for processing HOLODEC data by leveraging a combination of GPU hardware and machine learning with the eventual goal of improving HOLODEC processing speed and performance. We present a hologram processing algorithm, HolodecML, which utilizes a neural network segmentation model and computational parallelization to achieve these goals. HolodecML is trained using synthetically generated holograms based on a model of the instrument, and it predicts masks around particles found within reconstructed images. From these masks, the position and size of the detected particles can be characterized in three dimensions. In order to successfully process real holograms, we find we must apply a series of image corrupting transformations and noise to the synthetic images used in training. In this evaluation, HolodecML had comparable position and size estimations performance to the standard processing method, but it improved particle detection by nearly 20 % on several thousand manually labeled HOLODEC images. However, the particle detection improvement only occurred when image corruption was performed on the simulated images during training, thereby mimicking non-ideal conditions in the actual probe. The trained model also learned to differentiate artifacts and other impurities in the HOLODEC images from the particles, even though no such objects were present in the training data set. By contrast, the standard processing method struggled to separate particles from artifacts. HolodecML also leverages GPUs and parallel computing that enables large processing speed gains over serial and CPU-only based evaluation. Our results demonstrate that the machine-learning based framework may be a possible path to both improving and accelerating hologram processing. The novelty of the training approach, which leveraged noise as a means for parameterizing non-ideal aspects of the HOLODEC detector, could be applied in other domains where the theoretical model is incapable of fully describing the real-world operation of the instrument and accurate truth data required for supervised learning cannot be obtained from real-world observations.

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Related Dataset #1 : Data sets used in "Neural network processing of holographic images"

Related Preprint #1 : Very Deep Convolutional Networks for Large-Scale Image Recognition

Related Preprint #2 : Rethinking Atrous Convolution for Semantic Image Segmentation

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Related Preprint #5 : VideoGPT: Video Generation using VQ-VAE and Transformers

Related Service #1 : Cheyenne: SGI ICE XA Cluster

Related Software #1 : NCAR/holodec-ml: v0.1

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Author Schreck, John S.
Gantos, Gabrielle
Hayman, Matthew
Bansemer, Aaron R.
Gagne, David John
Publisher UCAR/NCAR - Library
Publication Date 2022-10-14T00:00:00
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Topic Category geoscientificInformation
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Metadata Date 2025-07-11T15:58:45.280432
Metadata Record Identifier edu.ucar.opensky::articles:25798
Metadata Language eng; USA
Suggested Citation Schreck, John S., Gantos, Gabrielle, Hayman, Matthew, Bansemer, Aaron R., Gagne, David John. (2022). Neural network processing of holographic images. UCAR/NCAR - Library. https://n2t.org/ark:/85065/d7bc43cq. Accessed 23 August 2025.

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