The Image Cytometry Standard (ICS) is a digital multidimensional image file format used in life sciences microscopy. It stores not only the image data, but also the microscopic parameters describing the optics during the acquisition. ICS was first proposed in: P. Dean, L. Mascio, D. Ow, D. Sudar, J. Mullikin, Proposed standard for image cytometry data files, Cytometry, n. 11, pp. 561-569, 1990 [1]. The .ics in the two-file format is a text file with fields separated by tabs, and lines ending with a newline character. In the newer ICS2 format this text header precedes the binary data.

AttributesValues
type
label
  • Image Cytometry Standard
comment
  • The Image Cytometry Standard (ICS) is a digital multidimensional image file format used in life sciences microscopy. It stores not only the image data, but also the microscopic parameters describing the optics during the acquisition. ICS was first proposed in: P. Dean, L. Mascio, D. Ow, D. Sudar, J. Mullikin, Proposed standard for image cytometry data files, Cytometry, n. 11, pp. 561-569, 1990 [1]. The .ics in the two-file format is a text file with fields separated by tabs, and lines ending with a newline character. In the newer ICS2 format this text header precedes the binary data.
owl:sameAs
Subject
name
  • Image Cytometry Standard
is primary topic of
Link from a Wikipage to an external page
έχει περίληψη
  • The Image Cytometry Standard (ICS) is a digital multidimensional image file format used in life sciences microscopy. It stores not only the image data, but also the microscopic parameters describing the optics during the acquisition. ICS was first proposed in: P. Dean, L. Mascio, D. Ow, D. Sudar, J. Mullikin, Proposed standard for image cytometry data files, Cytometry, n. 11, pp. 561-569, 1990 [1]. The original ICS file format actually uses two separate files: a text header file with .ics extension and other, much bigger and with the actual image data, with .ids extension. This allows the compression of the data while leaving the header file accessible. On the other hand, the newer ICS2 file format uses only one single .ics file with both the header and the data together. The .ics in the two-file format is a text file with fields separated by tabs, and lines ending with a newline character. In the newer ICS2 format this text header precedes the binary data. The ICS format is capable of storing: * multidimensional and multichannel data * images in 8, 16, 32 or 64 bit integer, 32 or 64 bit floating point and floating point complex data * all microscopic parameters directly relevant to the image formation * free-form comments
wasDerivedFrom
Wikipage page ID
  • 4531789(xsd:integer)
Wikipage revision ID
  • 1051909840(xsd:integer)
dbpprop:genre
dbpprop:wordnet_type
Link from a Wikipage to another Wikipage
page length (characters) of wiki page
  • 2111(xsd:integer)
dbpprop:extension
  • ,
http://purl.org/li...ics/gold/hypernym
dbpprop:wikiPageUsesTemplate
is owl:sameAs of
is topic of
is Wikipage disambiguates of
is Link from a Wikipage to another Wikipage of
Alternative Linked Data Views: Sponger | iSPARQL | ODE     Raw Data in: CXML | CSV | RDF ( N-Triples N3/Turtle JSON XML ) | OData ( Atom JSON )    About   
This material is Open Knowledge   W3C Semantic Web Technology [RDF Data] This material is Open Knowledge Creative Commons License Valid XHTML + RDFa
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported License.
OpenLink Virtuoso version 06.01.3127, on Linux (x86_64-pc-linux-gnu), Standard Edition
Copyright © 2009-2011 OpenLink Software