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Imaging System Hardware
neuroscience community. We have over 20 years of expertise creating low-noise
amplifiers and high-performance computer hardware to digitize these signals. Our
expertise in this area has been applied to the GenePix scanner. Integrated with the
GenePix scanner is not only our high-performance analog-digital converter, but also
the experience and knowledge to create low-noise, high-performance amplifiers.
We have employed a unique design to ensure that the PMT in the GenePix scanner
is linear over a wide dynamic range, and that the signal-to-noise level exceeds all
other currently available microarray scanners.
Performance Factors
Spatial Resolution
The GenePix Personal 4100A is a scanning instrument. This means that a single
beam of light is rapidly scanned across the microarray, and a composite pixilated
image is created from the digitized signals from the PMT. The spatial resolution of
the system refers to the size of the pixel. It determines the minimum distance that
can be distinguished between two points of light. In the GenePix scanner, the
highest spatial resolution is 5 microns.
It is possible to change the resolution of Data Scans by changing the pixel size
setting in the Hardware Settings dialog of the GenePix Pro software. It is important
to note that this does not change the size of the scanning beam. The GenePix
scanner implements changes in resolution by increasing the
y-
direction step size
and averaging the
x-
direction samples over multiples of 5-
µ
m spots. For example,
to change the pixel size from 5
µ
m to 10
µ
m the instrument only scans every
second
x-
direction line (by increasing each
y-
direction step from 5 to 10 µm—
consequently a 10-
µ
m scan is twice as fast as a scan at 5-
µ
m) and outputs the
average of each adjacent pair of 5-
µ
m spots in the
x-
direction as the value of a
single 10-
µ
m ‘pixel’. Similarly, a scan at 20-
µ
m pixel size is implemented by
scanning every fourth
x-
direction line (and so is four times faster than at 5
µ
m) and
GenePix 4100A User's Guide, Copyright 2005 Axon Instruments / Molecular Devices, Corp.