<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" standalone="yes"?><rss version="2.0" xmlns:atom="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom"><channel><title>ELMI | AICell Lab</title><link>https://aicell.io/tag/elmi/</link><atom:link href="https://aicell.io/tag/elmi/index.xml" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml"/><description>ELMI</description><generator>Wowchemy (https://wowchemy.com)</generator><language>en-us</language><lastBuildDate>Wed, 01 Jul 2026 11:32:53 +0000</lastBuildDate><image><url>https://aicell.io/media/icon_hubbd5b6736a681e06d544a07516505556_1406139_512x512_fill_lanczos_center_3.png</url><title>ELMI</title><link>https://aicell.io/tag/elmi/</link></image><item><title>BioEngine at ELMI 2026: AI Agents Meet the Core Facility</title><link>https://aicell.io/post/elmi-2026-bioengine/</link><pubDate>Wed, 01 Jul 2026 11:32:53 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://aicell.io/post/elmi-2026-bioengine/</guid><description>&lt;p>In mid-June, Nils Mechtel represented the lab in Portugal at the &lt;strong>26th ELMI (European Light
Microscopy Initiative), 16 to 19 June 2026&lt;/strong> in &lt;strong>Coimbra&lt;/strong>, a beautiful old university town on
the Mondego and a fitting backdrop for a meeting all about seeing life more clearly.&lt;/p>
&lt;figure id="figure-coimbra-on-the-mondego-host-city-of-elmi-2026">
&lt;div class="d-flex justify-content-center">
&lt;div class="w-100" >&lt;img alt="Coimbra on the Mondego, host city of ELMI 2026." srcset="
/post/elmi-2026-bioengine/coimbra_hua2905bb0cf8e55b461a66aa5b9eca6c4_347001_838802bfebb8bf66e9c47b42c407d891.webp 400w,
/post/elmi-2026-bioengine/coimbra_hua2905bb0cf8e55b461a66aa5b9eca6c4_347001_6e37a09cf9986f4659ae79cbbbd3a4d3.webp 760w,
/post/elmi-2026-bioengine/coimbra_hua2905bb0cf8e55b461a66aa5b9eca6c4_347001_1200x1200_fit_q75_h2_lanczos.webp 1200w"
src="https://aicell.io/post/elmi-2026-bioengine/coimbra_hua2905bb0cf8e55b461a66aa5b9eca6c4_347001_838802bfebb8bf66e9c47b42c407d891.webp"
width="760"
height="428"
loading="lazy" data-zoomable />&lt;/div>
&lt;/div>&lt;figcaption>
Coimbra on the Mondego, host city of ELMI 2026.
&lt;/figcaption>&lt;/figure>
&lt;h3 id="the-talk-bioengine-for-core-facility-workflows">The talk: BioEngine for core facility workflows&lt;/h3>
&lt;p>Nils gave the opening talk of the &lt;strong>&amp;ldquo;AI in Core Facility Life&amp;rdquo; session&lt;/strong> on &lt;strong>Core Facility Day&lt;/strong>,
presenting &lt;strong>&lt;a href="https://aicell.io/project/bioengine/">BioEngine&lt;/a>&lt;/strong> as &lt;em>open infrastructure for collaborative bioimage
AI&lt;/em>. His pitch to the facilities in the room was a practical one. The many pieces that core
facilities juggle every day, including a model repository (&lt;a href="https://bioimage.io" target="_blank" rel="noopener">BioImage.IO&lt;/a>),
analysis tools, a data repository, a knowledge base, chatbot and LLM agents, and smart-microscopy
control, do not have to be stitched together by hand. BioEngine, built with the
&lt;a href="https://ai4life.eurobioimaging.eu/" target="_blank" rel="noopener">AI4Life&lt;/a> consortium, makes bioimage-AI models runnable,
agent-readable and FAIR, and it can be deployed right at a facility&amp;rsquo;s own institute.&lt;/p>
&lt;figure id="figure-nils-presenting-the-bioengine-open-infrastructure-for-collaborative-bioimage-ai-overview-to-a-packed-elmi-hall">
&lt;div class="d-flex justify-content-center">
&lt;div class="w-100" >&lt;img alt="Nils presenting the BioEngine &amp;#39;open infrastructure for collaborative bioimage AI&amp;#39; overview to a packed ELMI hall." srcset="
/post/elmi-2026-bioengine/featured_hu89271531db5d0a094f4f184ef3c08a57_128211_1f6e34c54dbd21c2e79cc9066b946a41.webp 400w,
/post/elmi-2026-bioengine/featured_hu89271531db5d0a094f4f184ef3c08a57_128211_f9f0df3296c66379c90e72814913f36a.webp 760w,
/post/elmi-2026-bioengine/featured_hu89271531db5d0a094f4f184ef3c08a57_128211_1200x1200_fit_q75_h2_lanczos.webp 1200w"
src="https://aicell.io/post/elmi-2026-bioengine/featured_hu89271531db5d0a094f4f184ef3c08a57_128211_1f6e34c54dbd21c2e79cc9066b946a41.webp"
width="760"
height="570"
loading="lazy" data-zoomable />&lt;/div>
&lt;/div>&lt;figcaption>
Nils presenting the BioEngine &amp;lsquo;open infrastructure for collaborative bioimage AI&amp;rsquo; overview to a packed ELMI hall.
&lt;/figcaption>&lt;/figure>
&lt;h3 id="the-panel">The panel&lt;/h3>
&lt;p>After the talks, Nils joined the session&amp;rsquo;s two other speakers for a panel discussion, and the
conversation moved quickly to how far AI can really go inside a working facility. A central thread
was whether AI, and AI agents in particular, can help &lt;em>design and run&lt;/em> experiments rather than only
analyze the results afterward. Nils spoke to this from direct experience, describing how the lab
orchestrates experiments in its REEF Imaging Farm, a subject that felt especially timely after
&lt;a href="https://aicell.io/post/reef-first-live-demo/">the farm&amp;rsquo;s first live agent-run experiment&lt;/a>. From there the
discussion turned to a quieter but essential problem: making data AI-ready in the first place,
where AI can help with the metadata capture and preparation that good training data depends on, an
area the session&amp;rsquo;s later talks picked up in more depth. Teaching came up as well, and here Nils
offered a careful view. AI can widen access to knowledge and genuinely accelerate learning through
custom, on-demand explanation, but only when the setting keeps learning ahead of pure results.
Hand a student an agent that simply produces the answer, he noted, and they may walk away with the
result without the understanding. By the end, as these conversations tend to, it had opened out
into the broader debate about AI&amp;rsquo;s place in science and education.&lt;/p>
&lt;figure id="figure-the-ai-in-core-facility-life-panel-discussion">
&lt;div class="d-flex justify-content-center">
&lt;div class="w-100" >&lt;img alt="The &amp;#39;AI in Core Facility Life&amp;#39; panel discussion." srcset="
/post/elmi-2026-bioengine/panel_hu184dbdb4b4e3612ed3dd2edb989359cd_110928_900edc186f235563453255534b5e4595.webp 400w,
/post/elmi-2026-bioengine/panel_hu184dbdb4b4e3612ed3dd2edb989359cd_110928_ee66a47d81a9801a7ee81af3c78f622c.webp 760w,
/post/elmi-2026-bioengine/panel_hu184dbdb4b4e3612ed3dd2edb989359cd_110928_1200x1200_fit_q75_h2_lanczos.webp 1200w"
src="https://aicell.io/post/elmi-2026-bioengine/panel_hu184dbdb4b4e3612ed3dd2edb989359cd_110928_900edc186f235563453255534b5e4595.webp"
width="760"
height="570"
loading="lazy" data-zoomable />&lt;/div>
&lt;/div>&lt;figcaption>
The &amp;lsquo;AI in Core Facility Life&amp;rsquo; panel discussion.
&lt;/figcaption>&lt;/figure>
&lt;h3 id="beyond-the-stage">Beyond the stage&lt;/h3>
&lt;p>The interest in BioEngine did not stay in the lecture hall. Nils handed his contact to many people
who were keen to try it, and kept the BioEngine conversations going over coffee, lunch, dinner, and
after the workshops. He had also hung a poster for the Thursday-evening session, though, needing to
fly back to Sweden, he could not present it in person. The hallway conversations more than made up
for it.&lt;/p>
&lt;p>&lt;em>More from Nils on the conference in his &lt;a href="https://www.linkedin.com/posts/nils-mechtel_ai4life-elmi2026-bioimageanalysis-ugcPost-7474504796524371968-YkVH/" target="_blank" rel="noopener">LinkedIn post&lt;/a>. Conference details: &lt;a href="https://ppbi.pt/wordpress/index.php/elmi2026/" target="_blank" rel="noopener">ELMI 2026&lt;/a>, hosted by PPBI at the University of Coimbra.&lt;/em>&lt;/p>
&lt;p>&lt;strong>Curious about BioEngine?&lt;/strong> It is open. See the &lt;strong>&lt;a href="https://aicell.io/project/bioengine/">project page&lt;/a>&lt;/strong>, and if
building open infrastructure for AI-powered microscopy sounds like your thing,
&lt;strong>&lt;a href="https://aicell.io/#recruiting">come join us&lt;/a>&lt;/strong>.&lt;/p>
&lt;p>&lt;em>Written by Happy Agent from Nils&amp;rsquo;s notes and photos, and posted with his review.&lt;/em>&lt;/p></description></item></channel></rss>