1,773 research outputs found

    Optic nerve head segmentation

    Get PDF
    Reliable and efficient optic disk localization and segmentation are important tasks in automated retinal screening. General-purpose edge detection algorithms often fail to segment the optic disk due to fuzzy boundaries, inconsistent image contrast or missing edge features. This paper presents an algorithm for the localization and segmentation of the optic nerve head boundary in low-resolution images (about 20 /spl mu//pixel). Optic disk localization is achieved using specialized template matching, and segmentation by a deformable contour model. The latter uses a global elliptical model and a local deformable model with variable edge-strength dependent stiffness. The algorithm is evaluated against a randomly selected database of 100 images from a diabetic screening programme. Ten images were classified as unusable; the others were of variable quality. The localization algorithm succeeded on all bar one usable image; the contour estimation algorithm was qualitatively assessed by an ophthalmologist as having Excellent-Fair performance in 83% of cases, and performs well even on blurred image

    Enhancing retinal images by nonlinear registration

    Full text link
    Being able to image the human retina in high resolution opens a new era in many important fields, such as pharmacological research for retinal diseases, researches in human cognition, nervous system, metabolism and blood stream, to name a few. In this paper, we propose to share the knowledge acquired in the fields of optics and imaging in solar astrophysics in order to improve the retinal imaging at very high spatial resolution in the perspective to perform a medical diagnosis. The main purpose would be to assist health care practitioners by enhancing retinal images and detect abnormal features. We apply a nonlinear registration method using local correlation tracking to increase the field of view and follow structure evolutions using correlation techniques borrowed from solar astronomy technique expertise. Another purpose is to define the tracer of movements after analyzing local correlations to follow the proper motions of an image from one moment to another, such as changes in optical flows that would be of high interest in a medical diagnosis.Comment: 21 pages, 7 figures, submitted to Optics Communication

    Detection and removal of dust artifacts in retinal images via sparse-based inpainting

    Get PDF
    Dust particle artifacts are present in all imaging modalities but have more adverse consequences in medical images like retinal images. They could be mistaken as small lesions, such as microaneurysms. We propose a method for detecting and accurately segmenting dust artifacts in retinal images based on multi-scale template-matching on several input images and an iterative segmentation via an inpainting approach. The inpainting is done through dictionary learning and sparse-based representation. The artifact segmentation is refined by comparing the original image to the initial restoration. On average, 90% of the dust artifacts were detected in the test images, with state-of-theart restoration results. All detected artifacts were accurately segmented and removed. Even the most challenging artifacts located on top of blood vessels were removed. Thus, ensuring the continuity of the retinal structures. The proposed method successfully detects and removes dust artifacts in retinal images, which could be used to avoid false-positive lesion detections or as an image quality criterion. An implementation of the proposed algorithm can be accessed and executed through a Code Ocean compute capsule.The authors acknowledge the financial support from the Centre de CooperaciĂł i Desenvolupament (CCD) at the Universitat PolitĂšcnica de Catalunya under project ref. CCD 2019-B004, and from the Universidad TecnolĂłgica de BolĂ­var. Authors are grateful to Juan LuĂ­s Fuentes from the Miguel Servet University Hospital (Zaragoza, Spain) for providing the real images from clinical practice. E. Barrios thanks Minciencias and Sistema General de RegalĂ­as (Programa de Becas de Excelencia) for a PhD scholarship. E. Sierra thanks the Universidad TecnolĂłgica de BolĂ­var for a post-graduate scholarship. Parts of this work were presented at the Pattern Recognition and Tracking XXX - SPIE DCS, 2019 [39]. L. Romero, A. Marrugo, and M.S. MillĂĄn thank the funds provided by the Spanish Ministerio de Ciencia e InnovaciĂłn under the project reference PID2020-114582RB-I00.Peer ReviewedPostprint (published version

    Detection and removal of dust artifacts in retinal images via sparse-based inpainting

    Get PDF
    Dust particle artifacts are present in all imaging modalities but have more adverse consequences in medical images like retinal images. They could be mistaken as small lesions, such as microaneurysms. We propose a method for detecting and accurately segmenting dust artifacts in retinal images based on multi-scale template-matching on several input images and an iterative segmentation via an inpainting approach. The inpainting is done through dictionary learning and sparse-based representation. The artifact segmentation is refined by comparing the original image to the initial restoration. On average, 90% of the dust artifacts were detected in the test images, with state-of-theart restoration results. All detected artifacts were accurately segmented and removed. Even the most challenging artifacts located on top of blood vessels were removed. Thus, ensuring the continuity of the retinal structures. The proposed method successfully detects and removes dust artifacts in retinal images, which could be used to avoid false-positive lesion detections or as an image quality criterion. An implementation of the proposed algorithm can be accessed and executed through a Code Ocean compute capsul

    Automatic extraction of retinal features from colour retinal images for glaucoma diagnosis: a review

    Get PDF
    Glaucoma is a group of eye diseases that have common traits such as, high eye pressure, damage to the Optic Nerve Head and gradual vision loss. It affects peripheral vision and eventually leads to blindness if left untreated. The current common methods of pre-diagnosis of Glaucoma include measurement of Intra-Ocular Pressure (IOP) using Tonometer, Pachymetry, Gonioscopy; which are performed manually by the clinicians. These tests are usually followed by Optic Nerve Head (ONH) Appearance examination for the confirmed diagnosis of Glaucoma. The diagnoses require regular monitoring, which is costly and time consuming. The accuracy and reliability of diagnosis is limited by the domain knowledge of different ophthalmologists. Therefore automatic diagnosis of Glaucoma attracts a lot of attention.This paper surveys the state-of-the-art of automatic extraction of anatomical features from retinal images to assist early diagnosis of the Glaucoma. We have conducted critical evaluation of the existing automatic extraction methods based on features including Optic Cup to Disc Ratio (CDR), Retinal Nerve Fibre Layer (RNFL), Peripapillary Atrophy (PPA), Neuroretinal Rim Notching, Vasculature Shift, etc., which adds value on efficient feature extraction related to Glaucoma diagnosis. © 2013 Elsevier Ltd

    Review on Optic Disc Localization Techniques

    Get PDF
    The optic disc (OD) is one of the important part of the eye for detecting various diseases such as Diabetic Retinopathy and Glaucoma. The localization of optic disc is extremely important for determining hard exudates and lesions. Diagnosis of the disease can prevent people from vision loss. This paper analyzes various techniques which are proposed by different authors for the exact localization of optic disc to prevent vision loss

    Curved Gabor Filters for Fingerprint Image Enhancement

    Full text link
    Gabor filters play an important role in many application areas for the enhancement of various types of images and the extraction of Gabor features. For the purpose of enhancing curved structures in noisy images, we introduce curved Gabor filters which locally adapt their shape to the direction of flow. These curved Gabor filters enable the choice of filter parameters which increase the smoothing power without creating artifacts in the enhanced image. In this paper, curved Gabor filters are applied to the curved ridge and valley structure of low-quality fingerprint images. First, we combine two orientation field estimation methods in order to obtain a more robust estimation for very noisy images. Next, curved regions are constructed by following the respective local orientation and they are used for estimating the local ridge frequency. Lastly, curved Gabor filters are defined based on curved regions and they are applied for the enhancement of low-quality fingerprint images. Experimental results on the FVC2004 databases show improvements of this approach in comparison to state-of-the-art enhancement methods

    Optic disc detection by earth mover's distance template matching

    Get PDF
    This paper presents a method for the detection of OD in the retina which takes advantage of the powerful preprocessing techniques such as the contrast enhancement, Gabor wavelet transform for vessel segmentation, mathematical morphology and Earth Mover’s distance (EMD) as the matching process. The OD detection algorithm is based on matching the expected directional pattern of the retinal blood vessels. Vessel segmentation method produces segmentations by classifying each image pixel as vessel or nonvessel, based on the pixel’s feature vector. Feature vectors are composed of the pixel’s intensity and 2D Gabor wavelet transform responses taken at multiple scales. A simple matched filter is proposed to roughly match the direction of the vessels at the OD vicinity using the EMD. The minimum distance provides an estimate of the OD center coordinates. The method’s performance is evaluated on publicly available DRIVE and STARE databases. On the DRIVE database the OD center was detected correctly in all of the 40 images (100%) and on the STARE database the OD was detected correctly in 76 out of the 81 images, even in rather difficult pathological situations

    Automatic Segmentation of Optic Disc in Eye Fundus Images: A Survey

    Get PDF
    Optic disc detection and segmentation is one of the key elements for automatic retinal disease screening systems. The aim of this survey paper is to review, categorize and compare the optic disc detection algorithms and methodologies, giving a description of each of them, highlighting their key points and performance measures. Accordingly, this survey firstly overviews the anatomy of the eye fundus showing its main structural components along with their properties and functions. Consequently, the survey reviews the image enhancement techniques and also categorizes the image segmentation methodologies for the optic disc which include property-based methods, methods based on convergence of blood vessels, and model-based methods. The performance of segmentation algorithms is evaluated using a number of publicly available databases of retinal images via evaluation metrics which include accuracy and true positive rate (i.e. sensitivity). The survey, at the end, describes the different abnormalities occurring within the optic disc region
    • 

    corecore