2,267 research outputs found
Improving the Segmentation of Anatomical Structures in Chest Radiographs using U-Net with an ImageNet Pre-trained Encoder
Accurate segmentation of anatomical structures in chest radiographs is
essential for many computer-aided diagnosis tasks. In this paper we investigate
the latest fully-convolutional architectures for the task of multi-class
segmentation of the lungs field, heart and clavicles in a chest radiograph. In
addition, we explore the influence of using different loss functions in the
training process of a neural network for semantic segmentation. We evaluate all
models on a common benchmark of 247 X-ray images from the JSRT database and
ground-truth segmentation masks from the SCR dataset. Our best performing
architecture, is a modified U-Net that benefits from pre-trained encoder
weights. This model outperformed the current state-of-the-art methods tested on
the same benchmark, with Jaccard overlap scores of 96.1% for lung fields, 90.6%
for heart and 85.5% for clavicles.Comment: Presented at the First International Workshop on Thoracic Image
Analysis (TIA), MICCAI 201
Medical imaging analysis with artificial neural networks
Given that neural networks have been widely reported in the research community of medical imaging, we provide a focused literature survey on recent neural network developments in computer-aided diagnosis, medical image segmentation and edge detection towards visual content analysis, and medical image registration for its pre-processing and post-processing, with the aims of increasing awareness of how neural networks can be applied to these areas and to provide a foundation for further research and practical development. Representative techniques and algorithms are explained in detail to provide inspiring examples illustrating: (i) how a known neural network with fixed structure and training procedure could be applied to resolve a medical imaging problem; (ii) how medical images could be analysed, processed, and characterised by neural networks; and (iii) how neural networks could be expanded further to resolve problems relevant to medical imaging. In the concluding section, a highlight of comparisons among many neural network applications is included to provide a global view on computational intelligence with neural networks in medical imaging
High-Throughput Classification of Radiographs Using Deep Convolutional Neural Networks.
The study aimed to determine if computer vision techniques rooted in deep learning can use a small set of radiographs to perform clinically relevant image classification with high fidelity. One thousand eight hundred eighty-five chest radiographs on 909 patients obtained between January 2013 and July 2015 at our institution were retrieved and anonymized. The source images were manually annotated as frontal or lateral and randomly divided into training, validation, and test sets. Training and validation sets were augmented to over 150,000 images using standard image manipulations. We then pre-trained a series of deep convolutional networks based on the open-source GoogLeNet with various transformations of the open-source ImageNet (non-radiology) images. These trained networks were then fine-tuned using the original and augmented radiology images. The model with highest validation accuracy was applied to our institutional test set and a publicly available set. Accuracy was assessed by using the Youden Index to set a binary cutoff for frontal or lateral classification. This retrospective study was IRB approved prior to initiation. A network pre-trained on 1.2 million greyscale ImageNet images and fine-tuned on augmented radiographs was chosen. The binary classification method correctly classified 100Â % (95Â % CI 99.73-100Â %) of both our test set and the publicly available images. Classification was rapid, at 38 images per second. A deep convolutional neural network created using non-radiological images, and an augmented set of radiographs is effective in highly accurate classification of chest radiograph view type and is a feasible, rapid method for high-throughput annotation
Recommended from our members
Sensor, Signal, and Imaging Informatics in 2017.
Objective To summarize significant contributions to sensor, signal, and imaging informatics literature published in 2017.Methods PubMed® and Web of Science® were searched to identify the scientific publications published in 2017 that addressed sensors, signals, and imaging in medical informatics. Fifteen papers were selected by consensus as candidate best papers. Each candidate article was reviewed by section editors and at least two other external reviewers. The final selection of the four best papers was conducted by the editorial board of the International Medical Informatics Association (IMIA) Yearbook.Results The selected papers of 2017 demonstrate the important scientific advances in management and analysis of sensor, signal, and imaging information.ConclusionThe growth of signal and imaging data and the increasing power of machine learning techniques have engendered new opportunities for research in medical informatics. This synopsis highlights cutting-edge contributions to the science of Sensor, Signal, and Imaging Informatics
Dimensionality Reduction in Deep Learning for Chest X-Ray Analysis of Lung Cancer
Efficiency of some dimensionality reduction techniques, like lung
segmentation, bone shadow exclusion, and t-distributed stochastic neighbor
embedding (t-SNE) for exclusion of outliers, is estimated for analysis of chest
X-ray (CXR) 2D images by deep learning approach to help radiologists identify
marks of lung cancer in CXR. Training and validation of the simple
convolutional neural network (CNN) was performed on the open JSRT dataset
(dataset #01), the JSRT after bone shadow exclusion - BSE-JSRT (dataset #02),
JSRT after lung segmentation (dataset #03), BSE-JSRT after lung segmentation
(dataset #04), and segmented BSE-JSRT after exclusion of outliers by t-SNE
method (dataset #05). The results demonstrate that the pre-processed dataset
obtained after lung segmentation, bone shadow exclusion, and filtering out the
outliers by t-SNE (dataset #05) demonstrates the highest training rate and best
accuracy in comparison to the other pre-processed datasets.Comment: 6 pages, 14 figure
- …