6533b826fe1ef96bd128473a
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Discrimination of retinal images containing bright lesions using sparse coded features and SVM
Désiré SidibéIbrahim SadekFabrice Meriaudeausubject
MaleDatabases Factualgenetic structuresFeature extractionHealth Informatics02 engineering and technologyDrusen[ INFO.INFO-CV ] Computer Science [cs]/Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition [cs.CV]Retina030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging03 medical and health scienceschemistry.chemical_compound0302 clinical medicine0202 electrical engineering electronic engineering information engineeringmedicineImage Processing Computer-AssistedHumansComputer visionRetinaDiabetic RetinopathyContextual image classificationbusiness.industry[INFO.INFO-CV]Computer Science [cs]/Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition [cs.CV]RetinalDiabetic retinopathymedicine.diseaseComputer Science ApplicationsSupport vector machinemedicine.anatomical_structurechemistry020201 artificial intelligence & image processingFemaleArtificial intelligenceNeural codingbusinessdescription
Diabetic Retinopathy (DR) is a chronic progressive disease of the retinal microvasculature which is among the major causes of vision loss in the world. The diagnosis of DR is based on the detection of retinal lesions such as microaneurysms, exudates and drusen in retinal images acquired by a fundus camera. However, bright lesions such as exudates and drusen share similar appearances while being signs of different diseases. Therefore, discriminating between different types of lesions is of interest for improving screening performances. In this paper, we propose to use sparse coding techniques for retinal images classification. In particular, we are interested in discriminating between retinal images containing either exudates or drusen, and normal images free of lesions. Extensive experiments show that dictionary learning techniques can capture strong structures of retinal images and produce discriminant descriptors for classification. In particular, using a linear SVM with the obtained sparse coded features, the proposed method achieves superior performance as compared with the popular Bag-of-Visual-Word approach for image classification. Experiments with a dataset of 828 retinal images collected from various sources show that the proposed approach provides excellent discrimination results for normal, drusen and exudates images. It achieves a sensitivity and a specificity of 96.50% and 97.70% for the normal class; 99.10% and 100% for the drusen class; and 97.40% and 98.20% for the exudates class with a medium size dictionary of 100 atoms. HighlightsAutomatic feature extraction from retinal images.Discrimination between retinal images containing bright lesions.Retinal images classification using sparse coding.Better performance than bag-of-word approach.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2015-04-01 |