5 research outputs found
Action Recognition in Multi-view Videos
A long-lasting goal in the field of artificial intelligence is to develop agents that can perceive and understand the rich visual world around us. With the improvement in deep learning and neural networks, many previous difficulties in the computer vision area have been resolved. For example, the accuracy in image classification has even exceeded human being in the ImageNet challenge. However, some issues are still attractive in the community, like action recognition and its application in multi-view videos. Based on a large number of previous works in the last few years, we propose a new Dividing and Aggregating Network (DA-Net) to address the problem of action recognition in multi-view videos in this thesis. First, the DA-Net can learn view-independent representations shared by all views at lower layers and learn one view-specific representation for each view at higher layers. We then train view-specific action classifiers based on the view-specific representation for each view and a view classifier based on the shared representation at lower layers. The view classifier is used to predict how likely each video belongs to each view. Finally, the predicted view probabilities from multiple views are used as the weights when fusing the prediction scores of view-specific action classifiers. We also propose a new approach based on the conditional random field (CRF) formulation to pass message among view-specific representations from different branches to help each other. Comprehensive experiments are conducted accordingly. The experiments on three benchmark datasets clearly demonstrate the effectiveness of our proposed DA-Net for multi-view action recognition. We also conduct the ablation study, which indicates the three modules we proposed can provide steady improvements to the prediction accuracy
Real world validation of an AI-based CT hemorrhage detection tool
IntroductionIntracranial hemorrhage (ICH) is a potentially life-threatening medical event that requires expedited diagnosis with computed tomography (CT). Automated medical imaging triaging tools can rapidly bring scans containing critical abnormalities, such as ICH, to the attention of radiologists and clinicians. Here, we retrospectively investigated the real-world performance of VeriScout™, an artificial intelligence-based CT hemorrhage detection and triage tool.MethodsGround truth for the presence or absence of ICH was iteratively determined by expert consensus in an unselected dataset of 527 consecutively acquired non-contrast head CT scans, which were sub-grouped according to the presence of artefact, post-operative features and referral source. The performance of VeriScout™ was compared with the ground truths for all groups.ResultsVeriScout™ detected hemorrhage with a sensitivity of 0.92 (CI 0.84–0.96) and a specificity of 0.96 (CI 0.94–0.98) in the global dataset, exceeding the sensitivity of general radiologists (0.88) with only a minor relative decrement in specificity (0.98). Crucially, the AI tool detected 13/14 cases of subarachnoid hemorrhage, a potentially fatal condition that is often missed in emergency department settings. There was no decrement in the performance of VeriScout™ in scans containing artefact or postoperative change. Using an integrated informatics platform, VeriScout™ was deployed into the existing radiology workflow. Detected hemorrhage cases were flagged in the hospital radiology information system (RIS) and relevant, annotated, preview images made available in the picture archiving and communications system (PACS) within 10 min.ConclusionAI-based radiology worklist prioritization for critical abnormalities, such as ICH, may enhance patient care without adding to radiologist or clinician burden
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A real-world clinical validation for AI-based MRI monitoring in multiple sclerosis.
Acknowledgements: The authors would like to acknowledge funding support from Australian Government Department of Industry (CRCPFIVE000141). C.W. would like to acknowledge the support from the Nerve Research Foundation at The University of Sydney and Multiple Sclerosis Australia (18–0461).Modern management of MS targets No Evidence of Disease Activity (NEDA): no clinical relapses, no magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) disease activity and no disability worsening. While MRI is the principal tool available to neurologists for monitoring clinically silent MS disease activity and, where appropriate, escalating treatment, standard radiology reports are qualitative and may be insensitive to the development of new or enlarging lesions. Existing quantitative neuroimaging tools lack adequate clinical validation. In 397 multi-center MRI scan pairs acquired in routine practice, we demonstrate superior case-level sensitivity of a clinically integrated AI-based tool over standard radiology reports (93.3% vs 58.3%), relative to a consensus ground truth, with minimal loss of specificity. We also demonstrate equivalence of the AI-tool with a core clinical trial imaging lab for lesion activity and quantitative brain volumetric measures, including percentage brain volume loss (PBVC), an accepted biomarker of neurodegeneration in MS (mean PBVC -0.32% vs -0.36%, respectively), whereas even severe atrophy (>0.8% loss) was not appreciated in radiology reports. Finally, the AI-tool additionally embeds a clinically meaningful, experiential comparator that returns a relevant MS patient centile for lesion burden, revealing, in our cohort, inconsistencies in qualitative descriptors used in radiology reports. AI-based image quantitation enhances the accuracy of, and value-adds to, qualitative radiology reporting. Scaled deployment of these tools will open a path to precision management for patients with MS
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A real-world clinical validation for AI-based MRI monitoring in multiple sclerosis.
Acknowledgements: The authors would like to acknowledge funding support from Australian Government Department of Industry (CRCPFIVE000141). C.W. would like to acknowledge the support from the Nerve Research Foundation at The University of Sydney and Multiple Sclerosis Australia (18–0461).Modern management of MS targets No Evidence of Disease Activity (NEDA): no clinical relapses, no magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) disease activity and no disability worsening. While MRI is the principal tool available to neurologists for monitoring clinically silent MS disease activity and, where appropriate, escalating treatment, standard radiology reports are qualitative and may be insensitive to the development of new or enlarging lesions. Existing quantitative neuroimaging tools lack adequate clinical validation. In 397 multi-center MRI scan pairs acquired in routine practice, we demonstrate superior case-level sensitivity of a clinically integrated AI-based tool over standard radiology reports (93.3% vs 58.3%), relative to a consensus ground truth, with minimal loss of specificity. We also demonstrate equivalence of the AI-tool with a core clinical trial imaging lab for lesion activity and quantitative brain volumetric measures, including percentage brain volume loss (PBVC), an accepted biomarker of neurodegeneration in MS (mean PBVC -0.32% vs -0.36%, respectively), whereas even severe atrophy (>0.8% loss) was not appreciated in radiology reports. Finally, the AI-tool additionally embeds a clinically meaningful, experiential comparator that returns a relevant MS patient centile for lesion burden, revealing, in our cohort, inconsistencies in qualitative descriptors used in radiology reports. AI-based image quantitation enhances the accuracy of, and value-adds to, qualitative radiology reporting. Scaled deployment of these tools will open a path to precision management for patients with MS