17 research outputs found
Progressive Class-Wise Attention (PCA) Approach for Diagnosing Skin Lesions
Skin cancer holds the highest incidence rate among all cancers globally. The
importance of early detection cannot be overstated, as late-stage cases can be
lethal. Classifying skin lesions, however, presents several challenges due to
the many variations they can exhibit, such as differences in colour, shape, and
size, significant variation within the same class, and notable similarities
between different classes. This paper introduces a novel class-wise attention
technique that equally regards each class while unearthing more specific
details about skin lesions. This attention mechanism is progressively used to
amalgamate discriminative feature details from multiple scales. The introduced
technique demonstrated impressive performance, surpassing more than 15
cutting-edge methods including the winners of HAM1000 and ISIC 2019
leaderboards. It achieved an impressive accuracy rate of 97.40% on the HAM10000
dataset and 94.9% on the ISIC 2019 dataset
Fusing fine-tuned deep features for skin lesion classification
© 2018 Elsevier Ltd Malignant melanoma is one of the most aggressive forms of skin cancer. Early detection is important as it significantly improves survival rates. Consequently, accurate discrimination of malignant skin lesions from benign lesions such as seborrheic keratoses or benign nevi is crucial, while accurate computerised classification of skin lesion images is of great interest to support diagnosis. In this paper, we propose a fully automatic computerised method to classify skin lesions from dermoscopic images. Our approach is based on a novel ensemble scheme for convolutional neural networks (CNNs) that combines intra-architecture and inter-architecture network fusion. The proposed method consists of multiple sets of CNNs of different architecture that represent different feature abstraction levels. Each set of CNNs consists of a number of pre-trained networks that have identical architecture but are fine-tuned on dermoscopic skin lesion images with different settings. The deep features of each network were used to train different support vector machine classifiers. Finally, the average prediction probability classification vectors from different sets are fused to provide the final prediction. Evaluated on the 600 test images of the ISIC 2017 skin lesion classification challenge, the proposed algorithm yields an area under receiver operating characteristic curve of 87.3% for melanoma classification and an area under receiver operating characteristic curve of 95.5% for seborrheic keratosis classification, outperforming the top-ranked methods of the challenge while being simpler compared to them. The obtained results convincingly demonstrate our proposed approach to represent a reliable and robust method for feature extraction, model fusion and classification of dermoscopic skin lesion images