2,409 research outputs found
Automatic Brain Tumor Segmentation using Cascaded Anisotropic Convolutional Neural Networks
A cascade of fully convolutional neural networks is proposed to segment
multi-modal Magnetic Resonance (MR) images with brain tumor into background and
three hierarchical regions: whole tumor, tumor core and enhancing tumor core.
The cascade is designed to decompose the multi-class segmentation problem into
a sequence of three binary segmentation problems according to the subregion
hierarchy. The whole tumor is segmented in the first step and the bounding box
of the result is used for the tumor core segmentation in the second step. The
enhancing tumor core is then segmented based on the bounding box of the tumor
core segmentation result. Our networks consist of multiple layers of
anisotropic and dilated convolution filters, and they are combined with
multi-view fusion to reduce false positives. Residual connections and
multi-scale predictions are employed in these networks to boost the
segmentation performance. Experiments with BraTS 2017 validation set show that
the proposed method achieved average Dice scores of 0.7859, 0.9050, 0.8378 for
enhancing tumor core, whole tumor and tumor core, respectively. The
corresponding values for BraTS 2017 testing set were 0.7831, 0.8739, and
0.7748, respectively.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figures. MICCAI Brats Challenge 201
Automatic Brain Tumor Segmentation using Convolutional Neural Networks with Test-Time Augmentation
Automatic brain tumor segmentation plays an important role for diagnosis,
surgical planning and treatment assessment of brain tumors. Deep convolutional
neural networks (CNNs) have been widely used for this task. Due to the
relatively small data set for training, data augmentation at training time has
been commonly used for better performance of CNNs. Recent works also
demonstrated the usefulness of using augmentation at test time, in addition to
training time, for achieving more robust predictions. We investigate how
test-time augmentation can improve CNNs' performance for brain tumor
segmentation. We used different underpinning network structures and augmented
the image by 3D rotation, flipping, scaling and adding random noise at both
training and test time. Experiments with BraTS 2018 training and validation set
show that test-time augmentation helps to improve the brain tumor segmentation
accuracy and obtain uncertainty estimation of the segmentation results.Comment: 12 pages, 3 figures, MICCAI BrainLes 201
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