DL
Deep convolutional neural network based medical image classification for disease
author
Samir S. Yadav and Shivajirao M. Jadhav
Introduction
基于CNN的图像分类任务中提升性能的方法:
- 数据增强;
- 迁移学习;
- 胶囊网络.
论文贡献:
- 三种分类器性能的比较
- 带ORB的SVM;
- VGG16 和 Inception V3 的迁移学习;
- 胶囊网络。
- 通过CNN上的迁移学习分析 数据增强、网络复杂度、微调卷积层、和其他防止过拟合方法在胸部X-ray数据集上的有效性。
Literature review
-
ORB and SVM application on medical image classification
- Paredes et al. [21] use small patches of medical images as local features and k-nearest neighbor (k-NN) to classify the categorization of the whole medical image, finally achieving start-of-art accuracy.
- Parveen and Sathik [22] researched to detect Pneumonia from X-rays. The authors extracted features by discrete wavelet transform (DWT), wavelet frame transform (WFT) moreover, wavelet packet transform (WPT) and used Fuzzy C-means to detect Pneumonia.
- Caicedo et al. [23] use scale-invariant feature transform (SIFT) as a local feature descriptor and use support vector machines (SVM) classifiers to classify medical images and get state-of-art precision at 67%.
- Rublee et al. [24] propose a free, faster local feature descriptor-oriented fast and rotated binary robust independent elementary features (ORB), which has the same performance as SIFT and even better performance than SIFT under some condition.
-
CNN on medical image classification
- Qing et al. [28] presented a customized CNN with shallow ConvLayer to classify image patches of lung disease.
- Kermany et al. [3] use InceptionV3 with ImageNet trained weight and transfer learning on a medical image dataset containing 108,312 optical coherence tomography (OCT) images. They got an average accuracy of 96.6%, with a sensitivity of 97.8% and a specificity of 97.4%.
- Vianna [30] also studied how to utilize transfer learning to build an X-ray image classification system that is the critical component of a computer-aided-diagnosis system. The authors found a finetuned transfer learning system with data augmentation effectively alleviate overfitting problem and yield a better result than two other models: training from scratch and a transfer learning model with only a retrained last classification layer.
-
Capsule neural network on medical image classification
- Afshar et al. [18] applied CapsNet to classifying brain tumors on Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) images and got 86.56% prediction accuracy with a modified CapsNet that reduces the feature maps from the original 256 to 64.
- Tomas and Robertas [31] presented a CapsNet based solution to classify four types of breast tissue biopsies from breast cancer histology images. They achieved 87% accuracy with the same high sensitivity.
- Jimenez-Sanchez et al. [5] evaluated the CapsNet on medical image challenges. The authors selected a CNN with three layers of ConvLayer as the baseline and compared CapsNet’s performance with LeNet and the baseline on four datasets, MNIST, Fashion-MNIST, mitosis detection (TUPAC16) and diabetic retinopathy detection (DIARETDB1), with three conditions: the partial subset of the dataset, the imbalanced subset of the dataset and data augmentation. The final result shows CapsNet performed better than the other two networks in a small, imbalanced dataset.
- Beşer et al. [32] implemented a sign language recognizing system by CapsNet and achieved 94.2% validation accuracy.