“…However, no standardized frame rate exists when imaging cilia motility for subsequent CBF calculation, this has resulted in a large range of frames rates used to image cilia motility within the published literature (Abdelhamed et al, 2018 ; Abdelhamed et al, 2020 ; Bustamante‐Marin et al, 2019 ; Chen et al, 2016 ; Hagiwara et al, 2020 ; Hennessy et al, 1986 ; Liu et al, 2021 ; Mateos‐Quiros et al, 2021 ; Mikhailik et al, 2021 ; Reula et al, 2021 ; Smith et al, 2012 ; Zahid et al, 2020 ). The lack of a standardized fps for imaging motile cilia is especially problematic because it hinders high‐speed video microscopy from being clinically adapted as a diagnostic tool to help uncover motile cilia diseases, such as primary ciliary dyskinesia (Bricmont et al, 2021 ; Shapiro et al, 2018 ). The large disparity in frame rates used to image cilia motility is partly technology dependant, with early studies generally being restricted to lower fps imaging technology (2–25 Hz) (Clary‐Meinesz et al, 1992 ; Hennessy et al, 1986 ), while more recent studies with access to much faster and cheaper imaging technology generally having higher fps (≥500 fps) (Smith et al, 2012 ; Yasuda et al, 2020 ).…”