ﻻ يوجد ملخص باللغة العربية
The identification of melanoma involves an integrated analysis of skin lesion images acquired using the clinical and dermoscopy modalities. Dermoscopic images provide a detailed view of the subsurface visual structures that supplement the macroscopic clinical images. Melanoma diagnosis is commonly based on the 7-point visual category checklist (7PC). The 7PC contains intrinsic relationships between categories that can aid classification, such as shared features, correlations, and the contributions of categories towards diagnosis. Manual classification is subjective and prone to intra- and interobserver variability. This presents an opportunity for automated methods to improve diagnosis. Current state-of-the-art methods focus on a single image modality and ignore information from the other, or do not fully leverage the complementary information from both modalities. Further, there is not a method to exploit the intercategory relationships in the 7PC. In this study, we address these issues by proposing a graph-based intercategory and intermodality network (GIIN) with two modules. A graph-based relational module (GRM) leverages intercategorical relations, intermodal relations, and prioritises the visual structure details from dermoscopy by encoding category representations in a graph network. The category embedding learning module (CELM) captures representations that are specialised for each category and support the GRM. We show that our modules are effective at enhancing classification performance using a public dataset of dermoscopy-clinical images, and show that our method outperforms the state-of-the-art at classifying the 7PC categories and diagnosis.
In this paper, a deep neural network based ensemble method is experimented for automatic identification of skin disease from dermoscopic images. The developed algorithm is applied on the task3 of the ISIC 2018 challenge dataset (Skin Lesion Analysis Towards Melanoma Detection).
Existing studies for automated melanoma diagnosis are based on single-time point images of lesions. However, melanocytic lesions de facto are progressively evolving and, moreover, benign lesions can progress into malignant melanoma. Ignoring cross-ti
In this paper, we introduce a conceptually simple network for generating discriminative tissue-level segmentation masks for the purpose of breast cancer diagnosis. Our method efficiently segments different types of tissues in breast biopsy images whi
We present an automated approach to detect and longitudinally track skin lesions on 3D total-body skin surfaces scans. The acquired 3D mesh of the subject is unwrapped to a 2D texture image, where a trained region convolutional neural network (R-CNN)
Skin disease is one of the most common types of human diseases, which may happen to everyone regardless of age, gender or race. Due to the high visual diversity, human diagnosis highly relies on personal experience; and there is a serious shortage of