3 research outputs found

    Genetic algorithm based feature selection combined with dual classification for the automated detection of proliferative diabetic retinopathy

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    Proliferative diabetic retinopathy (PDR) is a condition that carries a high risk of severe visual impairment. The hallmark of PDR is the growth of abnormal new vessels. In this paper, an automated method for the detection of new vessels from retinal images is presented. This method is based on a dual classification approach. Two vessel segmentation approaches are applied to create two separate binary vessel map which each hold vital information. Local morphology features are measured from each binary vessel map to produce two separate 4-D feature vectors. Independent classification is performed for each feature vector using a support vector machine (SVM) classifier. The system then combines these individual outcomes to produce a final decision. This is followed by the creation of additional features to generate 21-D feature vectors, which feed into a genetic algorithm based feature selection approach with the objective of finding feature subsets that improve the performance of the classification. Sensitivity and specificity results using a dataset of 60 images are 0.9138 and 0.9600, respectively, on a per patch basis and 1.000 and 0.975, respectively, on a per image basis

    Application of deep learning techniques for biomedical data analysis

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    Deep learning and machine learning methods have been used for addressing the problems in the biomedical applications, such as diabetic retinopathy assessment and Parkinson's disease diagnosis. The severity of diabetic retinopathy is estimated by the expert's examination of fundus images based on the amount and location of three diabetic retinopathy signs (i.e., exudates, hemorrhages, and microaneurysms). An automatic and accurate system for detection of these signs can significantly help clinicians to make the best possible prognosis can result in reducing the risk of vision loss. For Parkinson's disease diagnosis, analysis of a speech voice is considered as the earliest symptom with the advantage of being non-intrusive and suitable for online applications. While some reported outcomes of the developed techniques have shown the good results and ongoing progress for these two applications, designing new algorithms is a thriving research field to overcome the poor sensitivity and specificity of the outcomes as well as the limitations such as dataset size and heuristic selection of the network parameters. This thesis has comprehensively studied and developed various deep learning frameworks for detection of diabetic retinopathy signs and diagnosis of Parkinson's disease. To improve the performance of the current systems, this work has had an investigation on different techniques: (i) color space investigation, (ii) examination of various deep learning methods, (iii) development of suitable pre/post-processing algorithms and (iv) appropriate selection of deep learning architectures and parameters. For diabetic retinopathy assessment, this thesis has proposed the new color space as the input for the deep learning models that obtained better replicability compared with the conventional color spaces. This has also shown the pre-trained model can extract more relevant features compared to the models which were trained from scratch. This has also presented a deep learning framework combined with the suitable pre and post-processing algorithms that increased the performance of the system. By investigation different architectures and parameters, the suitable deep learning model has been presented to distinguish between Parkinson's disease and healthy speech signal

    Risk Factors for Retinal Vascular Changes in Children and Pregnant Women

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    Ph.DDOCTOR OF PHILOSOPH
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