30 research outputs found
Recovering 3D Shape with Absolute Size from Endoscope Images Using RBF Neural Network
Medical diagnosis judges the status of polyp from the size and the 3D shape of the polyp from its medical endoscope image. However the medical doctor judges the status empirically from the endoscope image and more accurate 3D shape recovery from its 2D image has been demanded to support this judgment. As a method to recover 3D shape with high speed, VBW (Vogel-BreuĂź-Weickert) model is proposed to recover 3D shape under the condition of point light source illumination and perspective projection. However, VBW model recovers the relative shape but there is a problem that the shape cannot be recovered with the exact size. Here, shape modification is introduced to recover the exact shape with modification from that with VBW model. RBF-NN is introduced for the mapping between input and output. Input is given as the output of gradient parameters of VBW model for the generated
sphere. Output is given as the true gradient parameters of true values of the generated sphere. Learning mapping with
NN can modify the gradient and the depth can be recovered according to the modified gradient parameters. Performance of
the proposed approach is confirmed via computer simulation and real experiment
Automatic Esophageal Abnormality Detection and Classification
Esophageal cancer is counted as one of the deadliest cancers worldwide ranking the sixth among all types of cancers. Early esophageal cancer typically causes no symp- toms and mainly arises from overlooked/untreated premalignant abnormalities in the esophagus tube. Endoscopy is the main tool used for the detection of abnormalities, and the cell deformation stage is confirmed by taking biopsy samples. The process of detection and classification is considered challenging for several reasons such as; different types of abnormalities (including early cancer stages) can be located ran- domly throughout the esophagus tube, abnormal regions can have various sizes and appearances which makes it difficult to capture, and failure in discriminating between the columnar mucosa from the metaplastic epithelium. Although many studies have been conducted, it remains a challenging task and improving the accuracy of auto- matically classifying and detecting different esophageal abnormalities is an ongoing field. This thesis aims to develop novel automated methods for the detection and classification of the abnormal esophageal regions (precancerous and cancerous) from endoscopic images and videos.
In this thesis, firstly, the abnormality stage of the esophageal cell deformation is clas- sified from confocal laser endomicroscopy (CLE) images. The CLE is an endoscopic tool that provides a digital pathology view of the esophagus cells. The classifica- tion is achieved by enhancing the internal features of the CLE image, using a novel enhancement filter that utilizes fractional integration and differentiation. Different imaging features including, Multi-Scale pyramid rotation LBP (MP-RLBP), gray level co-occurrence matrices (GLCM), fractal analysis, fuzzy LBP and maximally stable extremal regions (MSER), are calculated from the enhanced image to assure a robust classification result. The support vector machine (SVM) and random forest (RF) classifiers are employed to classify each image into its pathology stage.
Secondly, we propose an automatic detection method to locate abnormality regions from high definition white light (HD-WLE) endoscopic images. We first investigate the performance of different deep learning detection methods on our dataset. Then we propose an approach that combines hand-designed Gabor features with extracted convolutional neural network features that are used by the Faster R-CNN to detect abnormal regions. Moreover, to further improve the detection performance, we pro- pose a novel two-input network named GFD-Faster RCNN. The proposed method generates a Gabor fractal image from the original endoscopic image using Gabor filters. Then features are learned separately from the endoscopic image and the gen- erated Gabor fractal image using the densely connected convolutional network to detect abnormal esophageal regions.
Thirdly, we present a novel model to detect the abnormal regions from endoscopic videos. We design a 3D Sequential DenseConvLstm network to extract spatiotem- poral features from the input videos that are utilized by a region proposal network and ROI pooling layer to detect abnormality regions in each frame throughout the video. Additionally, we suggest an FS-CRF post-processing method that incorpor- ates the Conditional Random Field (CRF) on a frame-based level to recover missed abnormal regions in neighborhood frames within the same clip.
The methods are evaluated on four datasets: (1) CLE dataset used for the classific- ation model, (2) Publicly available dataset named Kvasir, (3) MICCAI’15 Endovis challenge dataset, Both datasets (2) and (3) are used for the evaluation of detection model from endoscopic images. Finally, (4) Gastrointestinal Atlas dataset used for the evaluation of the video detection model. The experimental results demonstrate promising results of the different models and have outperformed the state-of-the-art methods
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DATA-DRIVEN APPROACH TO IMAGE CLASSIFICATION
Image classification has been a core topic in the computer vision community. Its recent success with convolutional neural network (CNN) algorithm has led to various real world applications such as large scale management of photos/videos on cloud/social-media, image based search for online retailers, self-driving cars, building robots and healthcare. Image classification can be broadly categorized into binary, multi-class and multi-label classification problems. Binary classification involves assigning one of the two class labels to an instance. In multi-class classification problem, an instance should be categorized into one of more than two classes. Multi-label classification is a generalized version of the multi-class classification problem where each image is assigned multiple labels as opposed to a single label.
In this work, we first present various methods that take advantage of deep representations (fully connected layer of pre-trained CNN on the ImageNet dataset) and yield better performance on multi-label classification when compared to methods that use over a dozen conventional visual features. Following the success of deep representations, we intend to build a generic end-to-end deep learning framework to address all three problem categories of image classification. However, there are still no well established guidelines (in terms of choosing the number of layers to go deeper, the number of kernels and the size, the type of regularizer, the choice of non-linear function, etc.) to build an efficient deep neural network and often network architecture design is specific to a problem/dataset. Hence, we present some initial efforts in building a computational framework called Deep Decision Network (DDN) which is completely data-driven. DDN is a tree-like structured built stage-wise. During the learning phase, starting from the root network node, DDN automatically builds a network that splits the data into disjoint clusters of classes which would be handled by the subsequent expert networks. This results in a tree-like structured network driven by the data. The proposed approach provides an insight into the data by identifying the group of classes that are hard to classify and require more attention when compared to others. This feature is crucial for people trying to solve the problem with little or no domain knowledge, especially for applications in medical domain. Initially, we evaluate DDN on a binary classification problem and later extend it to more challenging multi-class and multi-label classification problems. The extension of DDN to multi-class and multi-label involves some changes but they still operate under the same underlying principle. In all the three cases, the proposed approach is tested for its recognition performance and scalability on publicly available datasets providing comparison to other methods
Pattern Recognition
Pattern recognition is a very wide research field. It involves factors as diverse as sensors, feature extraction, pattern classification, decision fusion, applications and others. The signals processed are commonly one, two or three dimensional, the processing is done in real- time or takes hours and days, some systems look for one narrow object class, others search huge databases for entries with at least a small amount of similarity. No single person can claim expertise across the whole field, which develops rapidly, updates its paradigms and comprehends several philosophical approaches. This book reflects this diversity by presenting a selection of recent developments within the area of pattern recognition and related fields. It covers theoretical advances in classification and feature extraction as well as application-oriented works. Authors of these 25 works present and advocate recent achievements of their research related to the field of pattern recognition
Multispectral image analysis in laparoscopy – A machine learning approach to live perfusion monitoring
Modern visceral surgery is often performed through small incisions. Compared to open surgery, these minimally invasive interventions result in smaller scars, fewer complications and a quicker recovery. While to the patients benefit, it has the drawback of limiting the physician’s perception largely to that of visual feedback through a camera mounted on a rod lens: the laparoscope. Conventional laparoscopes are limited by “imitating” the human eye. Multispectral cameras remove this arbitrary restriction of recording only red, green and blue colors. Instead, they capture many specific bands of light. Although these could help characterize important indications such as ischemia and early stage adenoma, the lack of powerful digital image processing prevents realizing the technique’s full potential.
The primary objective of this thesis was to pioneer fluent functional multispectral imaging (MSI) in laparoscopy. The main technical obstacles were: (1) The lack of image analysis concepts that provide both high accuracy and speed. (2) Multispectral image recording is slow, typically ranging from seconds to minutes. (3) Obtaining a quantitative ground truth for the measurements is hard or even impossible.
To overcome these hurdles and enable functional laparoscopy, for the first time in this field physical models are combined with powerful machine learning techniques. The physical model is employed to create highly accurate simulations, which in turn teach the algorithm to rapidly relate multispectral pixels to underlying functional changes. To reduce the domain shift introduced by learning from simulations, a novel transfer learning approach automatically adapts generic simulations to match almost arbitrary
recordings of visceral tissue. In combination with the only available video-rate capable multispectral sensor, the method pioneers fluent perfusion monitoring with MSI. This system was carefully tested in a multistage process, involving in silico quantitative evaluations, tissue phantoms and a porcine study. Clinical applicability was ensured through in-patient recordings in the context of partial nephrectomy; in these, the novel system characterized ischemia live during the intervention. Verified against a fluorescence reference, the results indicate that fluent, non-invasive ischemia detection and monitoring is now possible.
In conclusion, this thesis presents the first multispectral laparoscope capable of videorate functional analysis. The system was successfully evaluated in in-patient trials, and future work should be directed towards evaluation of the system in a larger study. Due to the broad applicability and the large potential clinical benefit of the presented functional estimation approach, I am confident the descendants of this system are an integral part
of the next generation OR
Machine Learning and Deep Learning applications for the protection of nuclear fusion devices
This Thesis addresses the use of artificial intelligence methods for the protection of nuclear fusion devices with reference to the Joint European Torus (JET) Tokamak and the Wendenstein 7-X (W7-X) Stellarator. JET is currently the world's largest operational Tokamak and the only one operated with the Deuterium-Tritium fuel, while W7-X is the world's largest and most advanced Stellarator.
For the work on JET, research focused on the prediction of “disruptions”, and sudden terminations of plasma confinement. For the development and testing of machine learning classifiers, a total of 198 disrupted discharges and 219 regularly terminated discharges from JET.
Convolutional Neural Networks (CNNs) were proposed to extract the spatiotemporal characteristics from plasma temperature, density and radiation profiles. Since the CNN is a supervised algorithm, it is necessary to explicitly assign a label to the time windows of the dataset during training. All segments belonging to regularly terminated discharges were labelled as 'stable'. For each disrupted discharge, the labelling of 'unstable' was performed by automatically identifying the pre-disruption phase using an algorithm developed during the PhD. The CNN performance has been evaluated using disrupted and regularly terminated discharges from a decade of JET experimental campaigns, from 2011 to 2020, showing the robustness of the algorithm.
Concerning W7-X, the research involved the real-time measurement of heat fluxes on plasma-facing components. THEODOR is a code currently used at W7-X for computing heat fluxes offline. However, for heat load control, fast heat flux estimation in real-time is required. Part of the PhD work was dedicated to refactoring and optimizing the THEODOR code, with the aim of speeding up calculation times and making it compatible with real-time use. In addition, a Physics Informed Neural Network (PINN) model was proposed to bring thermal flow computation to GPUs for real-time implementation
Accurate depth from defocus estimation with video-rate implementation
The science of measuring depth from images at video rate using „defocus‟ has been investigated. The method required two differently focussed images acquired from a single view point using a single camera. The relative blur between the images was used to determine the in-focus axial points of each pixel and hence depth.
The depth estimation algorithm researched by Watanabe and Nayar was employed to recover the depth estimates, but the broadband filters, referred as the Rational filters were designed using a new procedure: the Two Step Polynomial Approach. The filters designed by the new model were largely insensitive to object texture and were shown to model the blur more precisely than the previous method. Experiments with real planar images demonstrated a maximum RMS depth error of 1.18% for the proposed filters, compared to 1.54% for the previous design.
The researched software program required five 2D convolutions to be processed in parallel and these convolutions were effectively implemented on a FPGA using a two channel, five stage pipelined architecture, however the precision of the filter coefficients and the variables had to be limited within the processor. The number of multipliers required for each convolution was reduced from 49 to 10 (79.5% reduction) using a Triangular design procedure. Experimental results suggested that the pipelined processor provided depth estimates comparable in accuracy to the full precision Matlab‟s output, and generated depth maps of size 400 x 400 pixels in 13.06msec, that is faster than the video rate.
The defocused images (near and far-focused) were optically registered for magnification using Telecentric optics. A frequency domain approach based on phase correlation was employed to measure the radial shifts due to magnification and also to optimally position the external aperture. The telecentric optics ensured pixel to pixel registration between the defocused images was correct and provided more accurate depth estimates
Image-set, Temporal and Spatiotemporal Representations of Videos for Recognizing, Localizing and Quantifying Actions
This dissertation addresses the problem of learning video representations, which is defined here as transforming the video so that its essential structure is made more visible or accessible for action recognition and quantification. In the literature, a video can be represented by a set of images, by modeling motion or temporal dynamics, and by a 3D graph with pixels as nodes. This dissertation contributes in proposing a set of models to localize, track, segment, recognize and assess actions such as (1) image-set models via aggregating subset features given by regularizing normalized CNNs, (2) image-set models via inter-frame principal recovery and sparsely coding residual actions, (3) temporally local models with spatially global motion estimated by robust feature matching and local motion estimated by action detection with motion model added, (4) spatiotemporal models 3D graph and 3D CNN to model time as a space dimension, (5) supervised hashing by jointly learning embedding and quantization, respectively. State-of-the-art performances are achieved for tasks such as quantifying facial pain and human diving. Primary conclusions of this dissertation are categorized as follows: (i) Image set can capture facial actions that are about collective representation; (ii) Sparse and low-rank representations can have the expression, identity and pose cues untangled and can be learned via an image-set model and also a linear model; (iii) Norm is related with recognizability; similarity metrics and loss functions matter; (v) Combining the MIL based boosting tracker with the Particle Filter motion model induces a good trade-off between the appearance similarity and motion consistence; (iv) Segmenting object locally makes it amenable to assign shape priors; it is feasible to learn knowledge such as shape priors online from Web data with weak supervision; (v) It works locally in both space and time to represent videos as 3D graphs; 3D CNNs work effectively when inputted with temporally meaningful clips; (vi) the rich labeled images or videos help to learn better hash functions after learning binary embedded codes than the random projections. In addition, models proposed for videos can be adapted to other sequential images such as volumetric medical images which are not included in this dissertation