WHOI Silhouette DIGITIZER

Version 1.0



This software and documentation were developed by Woods Hole Oceanographic Inst. and was funded as part of


 The National Science Foundation

GLOBEC program


WHOI Silhouette DIGITIZER is a MATLAB-based computer program for measuring the lengths of marine organisms in the macrozooplankton size range.  DIGITIZER begins by displaying a scanned photographic image of a seawater slurry containing large numbers of marine organisms, upon which is superimposed a reference grid.  DIGITIZER then allows you to measure the organisms' lengths using the cursor on the computer screen.  DIGITIZER automatically calculates each organism’s biomass and generates spreadsheet compatible output listings of basic statistics derived from the data.   DIGITIZER also produces text files of lengths, weights, and size-frequency histograms.


The User's Guide is available on your browser or can be downloaded and viewed in MS Word.

Here's how to install DIGITIZER.


A different set of files is required depending on your operating system and the version of MATLAB you are using.


STEP 1: Copy ONE of the zipped program folders to your hard disk. The choice depends on which version of Windows and which version of MATLAB you are using.


For Windows 98 and MATLAB 6.1, copy folder dig100w98m61 to hard disk.


For Windows 98 and MATLAB 6.5, copy folder dig100w98m65 to hard disk.


For Windows 2000 and MATLAB 6.1, copy folder dig100w2000m61 to hard disk.


For Windows 2000 and MATLAB 6.5, copy folder dig100w2000m65 to hard disk.


STEP 2: Change the name of the resulting hard disk folder to dig100.


STEP 3: Copy the tutorial folder tut100 to hard disk.


STEP 4: IMPORTANT: Change the disk access properties of both folders and all the files in them to READ/WRITE access, by un-checking their "Read-only" Attributes. Here's how to do this:

The tutorials assume that you have copied the folders to hard drive D.


You can change the folder names if you wish, but don't change any file names.


Copyright 2003, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution