222 research outputs found

    Dual-channel active contour model for megakaryocytic cell segmentation in bone marrow trephine histology images

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    Assessment of morphological features of megakaryocytes (special kind of cells) in bone marrow trephine biopsies play an important role in the classification of different subtypes of Philadelphia-chromosome-negative myeloproliferative neoplasms (Ph-negative MPNs). In order to aid hematopathologists in the study of megakaryocytes, we propose a novel framework that can efficiently delineate the nuclei and cytoplasm of these cells in digitized images of bone marrow trephine biopsies. The framework first employs a supervised machine learning approach that utilizes color and texture features to delineate megakaryocytic nuclei. It then employs a novel dual-channel active contour model to delineate the boundary of megakaryocytic cytoplasm by using different deconvolved stain channels. Compared to other recent models, the proposed framework achieves accurate results for both megakaryocytic nuclear and cytoplasmic delineation

    Segmentation of Intensity-Corrupted Medical Images Using Adaptive Weight-Based Hybrid Active Contours

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    6Segmentation accuracy is an important criterion for evaluating the performance of segmentation techniques used to extract objects of interest from images, such as the active contour model. However, segmentation accuracy can be affected by image artifacts such as intensity inhomogeneity, which makes it difficult to extract objects with inhomogeneous intensities. To address this issue, this paper proposes a hybrid region-based active contour model for the segmentation of inhomogeneous images. The proposed hybrid energy functional combines local and global intensity functions; an incorporated weight function is parameterized based on local image contrast. The inclusion of this weight function smoothens the contours at different intensity level boundaries, thereby yielding improved segmentation. The weight function suppresses false contour evolution and also regularizes object boundaries. Compared with other state-of-the-art methods, the proposed approach achieves superior results over synthetic and real images. Based on a quantitative analysis over the mini-MIAS and PH2 databases, the superiority of the proposed model in terms of segmentation accuracy, as compared with the ground truths, was confirmed. Furthermore, when using the proposed model, the processing time for image segmentation is lower than those when using other methods.openopenMemon A.A.; Soomro S.; Shahid M.T.; Munir A.; Niaz A.; Choi K.N.Memon, A. A.; Soomro, S.; Shahid, M. T.; Munir, A.; Niaz, A.; Choi, K. N

    Image Segmentation based on Multi-region Multi-scale Local Binar Fitting and Kullback-Leibler Divergence

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    The inhomogeneity of intensity and the noise of image are the two major obstacles to accurate image segmentation by region-based level set models. To provide a more general solution to these challenges and address the difficulty of image segmentation methods to handle an arbitrary number of regions, we propose a region-based multi-phase level set method, which is based on the multi-scale local binary fitting (MLBF) and the Kullback–Leibler (KL) divergence, called KL–MMLBF. We first apply the multi-scale theory and multi-phase level set framework to the local binary fitting model to build the multi-region multi-scale local binary fitting (MMLBF). Then the energy term measured by KL divergence between regions to be segmented is incorporated into the energy function of MMLBF. KL–MMLBF utilizes the between-cluster distance and the adaptive kernel function selection strategy to formulate the energy function. Being more robust to the initial location of the contour than the classical segmentation models, KL–MMLBF can deal with blurry boundaries and noise problems. The results of experiments on synthetic and medical images have shown that KL–MMLBF can improve the effectiveness of segmentation while ensuring the accuracy by accelerating this minimization of this energy function and the model has achieved better segmentation results in terms of both accuracy and efficiency to analyze the multi-region image

    Deep learning for image-based liver analysis — A comprehensive review focusing on malignant lesions

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    Deep learning-based methods, in particular, convolutional neural networks and fully convolutional networks are now widely used in the medical image analysis domain. The scope of this review focuses on the analysis using deep learning of focal liver lesions, with a special interest in hepatocellular carcinoma and metastatic cancer; and structures like the parenchyma or the vascular system. Here, we address several neural network architectures used for analyzing the anatomical structures and lesions in the liver from various imaging modalities such as computed tomography, magnetic resonance imaging and ultrasound. Image analysis tasks like segmentation, object detection and classification for the liver, liver vessels and liver lesions are discussed. Based on the qualitative search, 91 papers were filtered out for the survey, including journal publications and conference proceedings. The papers reviewed in this work are grouped into eight categories based on the methodologies used. By comparing the evaluation metrics, hybrid models performed better for both the liver and the lesion segmentation tasks, ensemble classifiers performed better for the vessel segmentation tasks and combined approach performed better for both the lesion classification and detection tasks. The performance was measured based on the Dice score for the segmentation, and accuracy for the classification and detection tasks, which are the most commonly used metrics.publishedVersio

    Segmentation of brain tumors in MRI images using three-dimensional active contour without edge

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    Brain tumor segmentation in magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is considered a complex procedure because of the variability of tumor shapes and the complexity of determining the tumor location, size, and texture. Manual tumor segmentation is a time-consuming task highly prone to human error. Hence, this study proposes an automated method that can identify tumor slices and segment the tumor across all image slices in volumetric MRI brain scans. First, a set of algorithms in the pre-processing stage is used to clean and standardize the collected data. A modified gray-level co-occurrence matrix and Analysis of Variance (ANOVA) are employed for feature extraction and feature selection, respectively. A multi-layer perceptron neural network is adopted as a classifier, and a bounding 3D-box-based genetic algorithm is used to identify the location of pathological tissues in the MRI slices. Finally, the 3D active contour without edge is applied to segment the brain tumors in volumetric MRI scans. The experimental dataset consists of 165 patient images collected from the MRI Unit of Al-Kadhimiya Teaching Hospital in Iraq. Results of the tumor segmentation achieved an accuracy of 89% +/- 4.7% compared with manual processes

    Statistical region-based active contours for segmentation: an overview

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    International audienceIn this paper we propose a brief survey on geometric variational approaches and more precisely on statistical region-based active contours for medical image segmentation. In these approaches, image features are considered as random variables whose distribution may be either parametric, and belongs to the exponential family, or non-parametric estimated with a kernel density method. Statistical region-based terms are listed and reviewed showing that these terms can depict a wide spectrum of segmentation problems. A shape prior can also be incorporated to the previous statistical terms. A discussion of some optimization schemes available to solve the variational problem is also provided. Examples on real medical images are given to illustrate some of the given criteria

    A convex selective segmentation model based on a piece-wise constant metric guided edge detector function

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    The challenge of segmentation for noisy images, especially those that have light in their backgrounds, is still exists in many advanced state-of-the-art segmentation models. Furthermore, it is significantly difficult to segment such images. In this article, we provide a novel variational model for the simultaneous restoration and segmentation of noisy images that have intensity inhomogeneity and high contrast background illumination and light. The suggested concept combines the multi-phase segmentation technology with the statistical approach in terms of local region knowledge and details of circular regions that are, in fact, centered at every pixel to enable in-homogeneous image restoration. The suggested model is expressed as a fuzzy set and is resolved using the multiplier alternating direction minimization approach. Through several tests and numerical simulations with plausible assumptions, we have evaluated the accuracy and resilience of the proposed approach over various kinds of real and synthesized images in the existence of intensity inhomogeneity and light in the background. Additionally, the findings are contrasted with those from cutting-edge two-phase and multi-phase methods, proving the superiority of our proposed approach for images with noise, background light, and inhomogeneity
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