313 research outputs found

    Analysis and automated classification of images of blood cells to diagnose acute lymphoblastic leukemia

    Get PDF
    Analysis of white blood cells from blood can help to detect Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia, a potentially fatal blood cancer if left untreated. The morphological analysis of blood cells images is typically performed manually by an expert; however, this method has numerous drawbacks, including slow analysis, low precision, and the results depend on the operator’s skill. We have developed and present here an automated method for the identification and classification of white blood cells using microscopic images of peripheral blood smears. Once the image has been obtained, we propose describing it using brightness, contrast, and micro-contour orientation histograms. Each of these descriptions provides a coding of the image, which in turn provides n parameters. The extracted characteristics are presented to an encoder’s input. The encoder generates a high-dimensional binary output vector, which is presented to the input of the neural classifier. This paper presents the performance of one classifier, the Random Threshold Classifier. The classifier’s output is the recognized class, which is either a healthy cell or an Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia-affected cell. As shown below, the proposed neural Random Threshold Classifier achieved a recognition rate of 98.3 % when the data has partitioned on 80 % training set and 20 % testing set for. Our system of image recognition is evaluated using the public dataset of peripheral blood samples from Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia Image Database. It is important to mention that our system could be implemented as a computational tool for detection of other diseases, where blood cells undergo alterations, such as Covid-1

    MoNuSAC2020:A Multi-Organ Nuclei Segmentation and Classification Challenge

    Get PDF
    Detecting various types of cells in and around the tumor matrix holds a special significance in characterizing the tumor micro-environment for cancer prognostication and research. Automating the tasks of detecting, segmenting, and classifying nuclei can free up the pathologists' time for higher value tasks and reduce errors due to fatigue and subjectivity. To encourage the computer vision research community to develop and test algorithms for these tasks, we prepared a large and diverse dataset of nucleus boundary annotations and class labels. The dataset has over 46,000 nuclei from 37 hospitals, 71 patients, four organs, and four nucleus types. We also organized a challenge around this dataset as a satellite event at the International Symposium on Biomedical Imaging (ISBI) in April 2020. The challenge saw a wide participation from across the world, and the top methods were able to match inter-human concordance for the challenge metric. In this paper, we summarize the dataset and the key findings of the challenge, including the commonalities and differences between the methods developed by various participants. We have released the MoNuSAC2020 dataset to the public

    A Survey on Deep Learning in Medical Image Analysis

    Full text link
    Deep learning algorithms, in particular convolutional networks, have rapidly become a methodology of choice for analyzing medical images. This paper reviews the major deep learning concepts pertinent to medical image analysis and summarizes over 300 contributions to the field, most of which appeared in the last year. We survey the use of deep learning for image classification, object detection, segmentation, registration, and other tasks and provide concise overviews of studies per application area. Open challenges and directions for future research are discussed.Comment: Revised survey includes expanded discussion section and reworked introductory section on common deep architectures. Added missed papers from before Feb 1st 201

    Review on Photomicrography based Full Blood Count (FBC) Testing and Recent Advancements

    Get PDF
    With advancements in related sub-fields, research on photomicrography in life science is emerging and this is a review on its application towards human full blood count testing which is a primary test in medical practices. For a prolonged period of time, analysis of blood samples is the basis for bio medical observations of living creatures. Cell size, shape, constituents, count, ratios are few of the features identified using DIP based analysis and these features provide an overview of the state of human body which is important in identifying present medical conditions and indicating possible future complications. In addition, functionality of the immune system is observed using results of blood tests. In FBC tests, identification of different blood cell types and counting the number of cells of each type is required to obtain results. Literature discuss various techniques and methods and this article presents an insightful review on human blood cell morphology, photomicrography, digital image processing of photomicrographs, feature extraction and classification, and recent advances. Integration of emerging technologies such as microfluidics, micro-electromechanical systems, and artificial intelligence based image processing algorithms and classifiers with cell sensing have enabled exploration of novel research directions in blood testing applications.

    Computational techniques in medical image analysis application for white blood cells classification.

    Get PDF
    White blood cells play important rule in the human body immunity and any change in their count may cause serious diseases. In this study, a system is introduced for white blood cells localization and classification. The dataset used in this study is formed by two components, the first is the annotation dataset that will be used in the localization (364 images), and the second is labeled classes that will be used in the classification (12,444 images). For the localization, two approaches will be discussed, a classical approach and a deep learning based approach. For the classification, 5 different deep learning architectures will be discussed, 3 pretrained architectures and 2 customized architectures will be presented. After discussing this models and test them on the dataset, the best selected model will be evaluated describing the obtained results. The localization module achieved average Intersection over Union (IoU) of 71%, while the classification module achieved 92 % classification accuracy. In addition to reporting the model performance, the model robustness was also checked by adding three different types of noise, Gaussian noise, salt and pepper noise, and speckle noise. This system outperforms other studies in the literature, where the accuracy was either less than the obtained from the system or the dataset was much smaller the used data in this study

    Improved White Blood Cells Classification based on Pre-trained Deep Learning Models

    Get PDF
    Leukocytes, or white blood cells (WBCs), are microscopic organisms that fight against infectious disease, bacteria, viruses, and others. The manual method to classify and count WBCs is tedious, time-consuming and may has inaccurate results, whereas the automated methods are costly. The objective of this work is to automatically identify and classify WBCs in a microscopic image into four types with higher accuracy. BCCD is the used dataset in this study, which is a scaled down blood cell detection dataset. BCCD is firstly pre-processed by passing through several processes such as segmentation and augmentation,then it is passed to the proposed model. Our model combines the privilege of deep models in automatically extracting features with the higher classification accuracy of traditional machine learning classifiers.The proposed model consists of two main layers; a shallow tuning pre-trained model and a traditional machine learning classifier on top of it. Here, ten different pretrained models with six different machine learning are used in this study. Moreover, the fully connected network (FCN) of pretrained models is used as a baseline classifier for comparison. The evaluation process shows that the hybrid between MobileNet-224 as feature extractor with logistic regression as classifier has a higher rank-1 accuracy with 97.03%. Besides, the proposed hybrid model outperformed the baseline FCN with 25.78% on average

    Automatic recognition of different types of acute leukaemia using peripheral blood cell images

    Full text link
    [eng] Clinical pathologists have learned to identify morphological qualitative features to characterise the different normal cells, as well as the abnormal cell types whose presence in peripheral blood is the evidence of serious haematological diseases. A drawback of visual morphological analysis is that is time consuming, requires well-trained personnel and is prone to intra-observer variability, which is particularly true when dealing with blast cells. Indeed, subtle interclass morphological differences exist for leukaemia types, which turns into low specificity scores in the routine screening. They are well-known the difficulties that clinical pathologists have in the discrimination among different blasts and the subjectivity associated with their morphological recognition. The general objective of this thesis is the automatic recognition of different types of blast cells circulating in peripheral blood in acute leukaemia using digital image processing and machine learning techniques. In order to accomplish this objective, this thesis starts with a discrimination among normal mononuclear cells, reactive lymphocytes and three types of leukemic cells using traditional machine learning techniques and hand-crafted features obtained from cell segmentation. In the second part of the thesis, a new predictive system designed with two serially connected convolutional neural networks is developed for the diagnosis of acute leukaemia. This system was proved to distinguish neoplastic (leukaemia) and non-neoplastic (infections) diseases, as well as recognise the leukaemia lineage. Furthermore, it was evaluated for its integration in a real-clinical setting. This thesis also contributes in advancing the state of the art of the automatic recognition of acute leukaemia by providing a more realistic approach which reflects the real-life complexity of acute leukaemia diagnosis

    The impact of pre- and post-image processing techniques on deep learning frameworks: A comprehensive review for digital pathology image analysis

    Get PDF
    Recently, deep learning frameworks have rapidly become the main methodology for analyzing medical images. Due to their powerful learning ability and advantages in dealing with complex patterns, deep learning algorithms are ideal for image analysis challenges, particularly in the field of digital pathology. The variety of image analysis tasks in the context of deep learning includes classification (e.g., healthy vs. cancerous tissue), detection (e.g., lymphocytes and mitosis counting), and segmentation (e.g., nuclei and glands segmentation). The majority of recent machine learning methods in digital pathology have a pre- and/or post-processing stage which is integrated with a deep neural network. These stages, based on traditional image processing methods, are employed to make the subsequent classification, detection, or segmentation problem easier to solve. Several studies have shown how the integration of pre- and post-processing methods within a deep learning pipeline can further increase the model's performance when compared to the network by itself. The aim of this review is to provide an overview on the types of methods that are used within deep learning frameworks either to optimally prepare the input (pre-processing) or to improve the results of the network output (post-processing), focusing on digital pathology image analysis. Many of the techniques presented here, especially the post-processing methods, are not limited to digital pathology but can be extended to almost any image analysis field
    • …
    corecore