Literature DB >> 23963192

Assessing the Need for Referral in Automatic Diabetic Retinopathy Detection.

Ramon Pires, Herbert F Jelinek, Jacques Wainer, Siome Goldenstein, Eduardo Valle, Anderson Rocha.   

Abstract

Emerging technologies in health care aim at reducing unnecessary visits to medical specialists, minimizing overall cost of treatment and optimizing the number of patients seen by each doctor. This paper explores image recognition for the screening of diabetic retinopathy, a complication of diabetes that can lead to blindness if not discovered in its initial stages. Many previous reports on DR imaging focus on the segmentation of the retinal image, on quality assessment, and on the analysis of presence of DR-related lesions. Although this study has advanced the detection of individual DR lesions from retinal images, the simple presence of any lesion is not enough to decide on the need for referral of a patient. Deciding if a patient should be referred to a doctor is an essential requirement for the deployment of an automated screening tool for rural and remote communities. We introduce an algorithm to make that decision based on the fusion of results by metaclassification. The input of the metaclassifier is the output of several lesion detectors, creating a powerful high-level feature representation for the retinal images. We explore alternatives for the bag-of-visual-words (BoVW)-based lesion detectors, which critically depends on the choices of coding and pooling the low-level local descriptors. The final classification approach achieved an area under the curve of 93.4% using SOFT-MAX BoVW (soft-assignment coding/max pooling), without the need of normalizing the high-level feature vector of scores.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2013        PMID: 23963192     DOI: 10.1109/TBME.2013.2278845

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  IEEE Trans Biomed Eng        ISSN: 0018-9294            Impact factor:   4.538


  6 in total

Review 1.  The Role of Different Retinal Imaging Modalities in Predicting Progression of Diabetic Retinopathy: A Survey.

Authors:  Mohamed Elsharkawy; Mostafa Elrazzaz; Ahmed Sharafeldeen; Marah Alhalabi; Fahmi Khalifa; Ahmed Soliman; Ahmed Elnakib; Ali Mahmoud; Mohammed Ghazal; Eman El-Daydamony; Ahmed Atwan; Harpal Singh Sandhu; Ayman El-Baz
Journal:  Sensors (Basel)       Date:  2022-05-04       Impact factor: 3.847

2.  MIRank-KNN: multiple-instance retrieval of clinically relevant diabetic retinopathy images.

Authors:  Parag Shridhar Chandakkar; Ragav Venkatesan; Baoxin Li
Journal:  J Med Imaging (Bellingham)       Date:  2017-09-01

3.  Automated multi-lesion detection for referable diabetic retinopathy in indigenous health care.

Authors:  Ramon Pires; Tiago Carvalho; Geoffrey Spurling; Siome Goldenstein; Jacques Wainer; Alan Luckie; Herbert F Jelinek; Anderson Rocha
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2015-06-02       Impact factor: 3.240

Review 4.  Machine Learning and Data Mining Methods in Diabetes Research.

Authors:  Ioannis Kavakiotis; Olga Tsave; Athanasios Salifoglou; Nicos Maglaveras; Ioannis Vlahavas; Ioanna Chouvarda
Journal:  Comput Struct Biotechnol J       Date:  2017-01-08       Impact factor: 7.271

5.  Deep Learning-Based Diabetic Retinopathy Severity Grading System Employing Quadrant Ensemble Model.

Authors:  Charu Bhardwaj; Shruti Jain; Meenakshi Sood
Journal:  J Digit Imaging       Date:  2021-03-08       Impact factor: 4.056

6.  Advancing bag-of-visual-words representations for lesion classification in retinal images.

Authors:  Ramon Pires; Herbert F Jelinek; Jacques Wainer; Eduardo Valle; Anderson Rocha
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2014-06-02       Impact factor: 3.240

  6 in total

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