See tutorial: Trace neurons in 3D with user-guided and smart manual tracing
You may need to place several points on the process to improve the accuracy of the tracing.
When the branch is effectively ended:
In this example, trace branch 1 (red) from soma to tip, then trace branch 2 (orange), and finally connect 1 and 2.
Keep Cycle tree colors selected to easily visualize potential connections between branches. This option automatically selects a new color each time you start a new tree.
Optional: Check centerline all trees when tracing to display the trees already traced as lines.
In this example, the orange branch was traced earlier and you realize that you missed a portion of the process. You resume tracing to include the last portion.
Right-click and click the check mark to end the user-guided tracing mode.
There are two aspects you can verify: directionality and node placement.
For proper branch ordering, specify the tree origin (directionality):
To view and correct node placement:
To undo your last click, press CTRL-Z.
The three tracing methods are based on algorithms that work by tracing along the dendrites/axons one point at a time, and by producing three measurements at each point: (X,Y,Z) coordinate, thickness, estimated position of the next point.
The detection takes into account the outer edges of branches.
The same algorithm was used in AutoNeuron. For details on the algorithm, see Rapid automated three-dimensional tracing of neurons from confocal image stacks (Al-Kofahi, Lasek, Szarowski, Pace, Nagy, Turner, and Roysam, 2002).
The detection is implemented from a branch centerline to its outer edges (manuscript in preparation).
This algorithm generates clusters of voxels iteratively along the dendrite/axon. These clusters are then used to position the nodes that define the centerline of the dendrite/axon.
The same algorithm is used in NeuronStudio (developed by the Mount Sinai School of Medicine). For details on the algorithm, see Three-Dimensional Neuron Tracing by Voxel Scooping (Rodriguez, Ehlenberger, Hof, & Wearne, 2009).
Tracing trees with the smart manual mode(3D), Trace trees (3D automatic)