1,013 research outputs found

    Colour normalisation to reduce inter-patient and intra-patient variability in microaneurysm detection in colour retinal images

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    Images of the human retina vary considerably in their appearance depending on the skin pigmentation (amount of melanin) of the subject. Some form of normalisation of colour in retinal images is required for automated analysis of images if good sensitivity and specificity at detecting lesions is to be achieved in populations involving diverse races. Here we describe an approach to colour normalisation by shade-correction intra-image and histogram normalisation inter-image. The colour normalisation is assessed by its effect on the automated detection of microaneurysms in retinal images. It is shown that the Na¨ıve Bayes classifier used in microaneurysm detection benefits from the use of features measured over colour normalised images

    Automatic Classification of Bright Retinal Lesions via Deep Network Features

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    The diabetic retinopathy is timely diagonalized through color eye fundus images by experienced ophthalmologists, in order to recognize potential retinal features and identify early-blindness cases. In this paper, it is proposed to extract deep features from the last fully-connected layer of, four different, pre-trained convolutional neural networks. These features are then feeded into a non-linear classifier to discriminate three-class diabetic cases, i.e., normal, exudates, and drusen. Averaged across 1113 color retinal images collected from six publicly available annotated datasets, the deep features approach perform better than the classical bag-of-words approach. The proposed approaches have an average accuracy between 91.23% and 92.00% with more than 13% improvement over the traditional state of art methods.Comment: Preprint submitted to Journal of Medical Imaging | SPIE (Tue, Jul 28, 2017

    UNRAVELLING DIABETIC RETINOPATHY THROUGH IMAGE PROCESSING, NEURAL NETWORKS AND FUZZY LOGIC – A REVIEW

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    One of the main causes of blindness is diabetic retinopathy (DR) and it may affect people of any ages. In these days, both young and old ages are affected by diabetes, and the di abetes is the main cause of DR. Hence, it is necessary to have an automated system with good accuracy and less computation time to diagnose and treat DR, and the automated system can simplify the work of ophthalmologists. The objective is to present an overview of various works recently in detecting and segmenting the various lesions of DR. Papers were categorized based on the diagnosing tools and the methods used for detecting early and advanced stage lesions. The early lesions of DR are microaneurysms, hemorrhages, exudates, and cotton wool spots and in the advanced stage, new and fragile blood vessels can be grown. Results have been evaluated in terms of sensitivity, specificity, accuracy and receiver operating characteristic curve. This paper analyzed the various steps and different algorithms used recently for the detection and classification of DR lesions. A comparison of performances has been made in terms of sensitivity, specificity, area under the curve, and accuracy. Suggestions, future workand the area to be improved were also discussed.Keywords: Diabetic retinopathy, Image processing, Morphological operations, Neural network, Fuzzy logic.Â

    An Ensemble Classifier Based on Individual Features for Detecting Microaneurysms in Diabetic Retinopathy

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    Individuals with diabetes are more likely to develop Diabetic Retinopathy (DR), a chronic ailment that can lead to blindness if left undiagnosed. Early-stage Diabetic Retinopathy (DR) is characterized by Microaneurysms (MA), which appear as tiny red lesions on the retina. This paper investigates a unique approach for the automated early identification of microaneurysms  in eye images. A unique ensemble classifier technique is suggested in this work. Classifiers like SVM, KNN, Decision Tree, and Naïve Bayes are chosen in this study for building an ensemble model. After preprocessing the image, certain common image characteristics such as shape and intensity features were retrieved from the candidate. The mean absolute difference of each feature is computed. Based on mean ranges that would give improved classification results, an expert classifier is chosen and trained. The outputs of the classifiers are integrated for each of the distinct characteristics, and the number of categories that have been most frequently repeated is utilized to reach a final decision. The process has been comprehensively validated using two available open datasets, like e-ophtha and DIARETDB1. On the e-ophtha and DIARETDB1 datasets, the ensemble model achieved an AUC of 0.928 and 0.873, Sensitivity of 90.7% and 85%, Specificity of 90% and 91% respectively
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