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A Hierarchical Multi-task Approach to Gastrointestinal Image Analysis

  • Adrian Galdran*
  • , Gustavo Carneiro
  • , Miguel A.González Ballester
  • *Autor correspondiente de este trabajo
  • Bournemouth University
  • University of Adelaide
  • ICREA

Producción científica: Capítulo del libro/informe/acta de congresoContribución a la conferenciarevisión exhaustiva

4 Citas (Scopus)

Resumen

A large number of different lesions and pathologies can affect the human digestive system, resulting in life-threatening situations. Early detection plays a relevant role in the successful treatment and the increase of current survival rates to, e.g., colorectal cancer. The standard procedure enabling detection, endoscopic video analysis, generates large quantities of visual data that need to be carefully analyzed by an specialist. Due to the wide range of color, shape, and general visual appearance of pathologies, as well as highly varying image quality, such process is greatly dependent on the human operator experience and skill. In this work, we detail our solution to the task of multi-category classification of images from the gastrointestinal (GI) human tract within the 2020 Endotect Challenge. Our approach is based on a Convolutional Neural Network minimizing a hierarchical error function that takes into account not only the finding category, but also its location within the GI tract (lower/upper tract), and the type of finding (pathological finding/therapeutic intervention/anatomical landmark/mucosal views’ quality). We also describe in this paper our solution for the challenge task of polyp segmentation in colonoscopies, which was addressed with a pretrained double encoder-decoder network. Our internal cross-validation results show an average performance of 91.25 Mathews Correlation Coefficient (MCC) and 91.82 Micro-F1 score for the classification task, and a 92.30 F1 score for the polyp segmentation task. The organization provided feedback on the performance in a hidden test set for both tasks, which resulted in 85.61 MCC and 86.96 F1 score for classification, and 91.97 F1 score for polyp segmentation. At the time of writing no public ranking for this challenge had been released.

Idioma originalInglés
Título de la publicación alojadaPattern Recognition. ICPR International Workshops and Challenges, 2021, Proceedings
EditoresAlberto Del Bimbo, Rita Cucchiara, Stan Sclaroff, Giovanni Maria Farinella, Tao Mei, Marco Bertini, Hugo Jair Escalante, Roberto Vezzani
EditorialSpringer Science and Business Media Deutschland GmbH
Páginas275-282
Número de páginas8
ISBN (versión impresa)9783030687922
DOI
EstadoPublicada - 2021
Publicado de forma externa
Evento25th International Conference on Pattern Recognition Workshops, ICPR 2021 - Virtual, Online, Italia
Duración: 10 ene 202115 ene 2021

Serie de la publicación

NombreLecture Notes in Computer Science
Volumen12668 LNCS
ISSN (versión impresa)0302-9743
ISSN (versión digital)1611-3349

Conferencia

Conferencia25th International Conference on Pattern Recognition Workshops, ICPR 2021
País/TerritorioItalia
CiudadVirtual, Online
Período10/01/2115/01/21

ODS de las Naciones Unidas

Este resultado contribuye a los siguientes Objetivos de Desarrollo Sostenible

  1. ODS 3: Salud y bienestar
    ODS 3: Salud y bienestar

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