SIMPLER: H&E-Informed Representation Learning for Structured Illumination Microscopy

April 11, 2026 ยท Grace Period ยท + Add venue

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Authors Abu Zahid Bin Aziz, Syed Fahim Ahmed, Gnanesh Rasineni, Mei Wang, Olcaytu Hatipoglu, Marisa Ricci, Malaiyah Shaw, Guang Li, J. Quincy Brown, Valerio Pascucci, Shireen Elhabian arXiv ID 2604.10334 Category cs.CV: Computer Vision Citations 0
Abstract
Structured Illumination Microscopy (SIM) enables rapid, high-contrast optical sectioning of fresh tissue without staining or physical sectioning, making it promising for intraoperative and point-of-care diagnostics. Recent foundation and large-scale self-supervised models in digital pathology have demonstrated strong performance on section-based modalities such as Hematoxylin and Eosin (H&E) and immunohistochemistry (IHC). However, these approaches are predominantly trained on thin tissue sections and do not explicitly address thick-tissue fluorescence modalities such as SIM. When transferred directly to SIM, performance is constrained by substantial modality shift, and naive fine-tuning often overfits to modality-specific appearance rather than underlying histological structure. We introduce SIMPLER (Structured Illumination Microscopy-Powered Learning for Embedding Representations), a cross-modality self-supervised pretraining framework that leverages H&E as a semantic anchor to learn reusable SIM representations. H&E encodes rich cellular and glandular structure aligned with established clinical annotations, while SIM provides rapid, nondestructive imaging of fresh tissue. During pretraining, SIM and H&E are progressively aligned through adversarial, contrastive, and reconstruction-based objectives, encouraging SIM embeddings to internalize histological structure from H&E without collapsing modality-specific characteristics. A single pretrained SIMPLER encoder transfers across multiple downstream tasks, including multiple instance learning and morphological clustering, consistently outperforming SIM models trained from scratch or H&E-only pretraining. Importantly, joint alignment enhances SIM performance without degrading H&E representations, demonstrating asymmetric enrichment rather
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