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Image Display Features

The Digital Sight camera control unit is equipped with an electronic zoom and pan utility that allows the user to magnify and examine fine details of both captured and live digital images. A split-screen feature is also included that enables a microscopist to perform a side-by-side comparison of a live specimen (currently being imaged through the microscope) with a previously captured image.

Most of the Digital Sight camera system image display controls are accessible from one of four menus, which can be launched by right-clicking the mouse on the upper portion of the display window, or by pressing the menu button on the front panel of the camera control unit. On the top portion of each of the four menus is a set of tabs labeled CAM, VIEW, REC, and TOOL (see the Tabs label presented in Figure 1). Clicking the mouse button while the cursor is positioned on a tab will display the corresponding menu, which contains a number of control features and four common icons. The standard Windows close icon (Close; Figure 1) in the upper right corner closes the menu window. Clicking the menu size icon (Menu Size; Figure 1), positioned to the left of the close icon, toggles between the small and large menu display. Clicking the mouse cursor on the freeze icon (Freeze; Figure 1) causes the view in the display window to become fixed at the last captured image, preventing the camera control unit from refreshing the displayed image. Clicking the freeze icon again will resume the live image feed.

Clicking the zoom button (Electronic Zoom; Figure 1) enables the user to zoom in on any portion of the image. When the zoom button has been selected, the mouse cursor is transformed into a magnifying glass pointer, and the user may then left-click on any point inside of the display window to zoom in on the image. Each time the user clicks on the display window, the image size is increased by a predetermined ratio, with the image center set at the point clicked. The image size increases in sequential steps of 100, 140, 200, 280, 400, 560, 800, 1000, and 1600 percent without any provision for display of intermediate sizes (for example, 600 percent). When the image is zoomed, the current magnification percentage will be displayed in the upper part of the screen opposite from the menu window, as illustrated in Figure 2 (400% size increase). The Additional Settings panel of the Setup menu, which is discussed thoroughly in the Additional Settings Panel Features section, can be utilized to enable or disable each of the enlargement steps.

When the image has been zoomed to a higher magnification, it is possible to pan the view of the zoomed image in the display window in order to display all portions of the image. When the mouse pointer is moved into the top, bottom, left, or right edge of the display window, the magnifying glass icon will change into a panning icon (illustrated at the right hand edge of the display window of Figure 3). When the panning icon is active and the user left-clicks on an edge of the image, the image view will slowly pan in the corresponding direction.

The Digital Sight camera system software is equipped with a split-screen display feature that allows the user to perform a side-by-side comparison between a live image and a captured or frozen image. The split-screen feature is accessible from the VIEW menu (Split-Screen Display; Figure 4).

When the split-screen feature is enabled, the image display window is divided into a left and right half, as illustrated in Figure 5. The left half of the display window contains the frozen or captured image, and the right half of the display window previews the live image. When the split-screen view is enabled, each image is displayed at the default (normal) size. In order to allow the user to view any part of either image while the split-screen view is enabled, the left- or right-hand image may be panned up, down, left, or right, with the dividing line between the two images serving as an edge for purposes of panning. It is also possible to zoom in on the split-screen image window using the magnifying glass icon as described above, or by using the zoom buttons on the front panel of the camera control unit. The split-screen view will remain active for as long as the menus are active, or until the SWIN icon is clicked on the VIEW menu (Live Image Display; Figure 4).

In conclusion, the Digital Sight camera system is capable of presenting the user with a wide variety of views of both captured and live specimen images. This feature allows the user to examine fine details of specimen images and to compare details of one specimen image to many others.

Contributing Authors

Matthew J. Parry-Hill, Thomas J. Fellers, and Michael W. Davidson - National High Magnetic Field Laboratory, 1800 East Paul Dirac Dr., The Florida State University, Tallahassee, Florida, 32310.

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