93,900 research outputs found
Computer-Assisted Segmentation of Videocapsule Images Using Alpha-Divergence-Based Active Contour in the Framework of Intestinal Pathologies Detection
Visualization of the entire length of the gastrointestinal tract through natural orifices is a challenge for endoscopists. Videoendoscopy is currently the “gold standard” technique for diagnosis of different pathologies of the intestinal tract. Wireless Capsule Endoscopy (WCE) has been developed in the 1990's as an alternative to videoendoscopy to allow direct examination of the gastrointestinal tract without any need for sedation. Nevertheless, the systematic post-examination by the specialist of the 50,000 (for the small bowel) to 150,000 images (for the colon) of a complete acquisition using WCE remains time-consuming and challenging due to the poor quality of WCE images. In this article, a semiautomatic segmentation for analysis of WCE images is proposed. Based on active contour segmentation, the proposed method introduces alpha-divergences, a flexible statistical similarity measure that gives a real flexibility to different types of gastrointestinal pathologies. Results of segmentation using the proposed approach are shown on different types of real-case examinations, from (multi-) polyp(s) segmentation, to radiation enteritis delineation
Deep Convolutional Neural Networks for Interpretable Analysis of EEG Sleep Stage Scoring
Sleep studies are important for diagnosing sleep disorders such as insomnia,
narcolepsy or sleep apnea. They rely on manual scoring of sleep stages from raw
polisomnography signals, which is a tedious visual task requiring the workload
of highly trained professionals. Consequently, research efforts to purse for an
automatic stage scoring based on machine learning techniques have been carried
out over the last years. In this work, we resort to multitaper spectral
analysis to create visually interpretable images of sleep patterns from EEG
signals as inputs to a deep convolutional network trained to solve visual
recognition tasks. As a working example of transfer learning, a system able to
accurately classify sleep stages in new unseen patients is presented.
Evaluations in a widely-used publicly available dataset favourably compare to
state-of-the-art results, while providing a framework for visual interpretation
of outcomes.Comment: 8 pages, 1 figure, 2 tables, IEEE 2017 International Workshop on
Machine Learning for Signal Processin
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