Literature DB >> 31154088

Multimodal brain tumor image segmentation using WRN-PPNet.

Yu Wang1, Changsheng Li2, Ting Zhu2, Jingyang Zhang3.   

Abstract

Tumor segmentation is of great importance for diagnosis and prognosis of brain cancer in medical field. Because of the noise, inhomogeneous gray, diversity of tissue, bias among modalities, and the fuzzy boundaries between tumor and adjacent tissues in the magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), tumor segmentation is a very difficult task. At present, many of the existing brain tumor segmentation methods are semi-automatic which are troublesome and inconvenient because interventions of raters or specialists are required. In this paper an automatic method, named wide residual network & pyramid pool network (WRN-PPNet), which can automatically segment glioma end to end is put forward. The main idea is described below. Firstly, WRN is used to extract features of multimodal brain tumor slices which are proved to have strong expressive ability. Secondly, the global prior representation with different level obtained by PPNet is stacked on the features from WRN. Finally, the scale recovery module in which the original inputs are fed into the network again is utilized to produce the pixel-level predictions which have the same size with the original inputs. Dice coefficients, sensitivity coefficient and predictive positivity value (PPV) coefficient are used to evaluate the performance of WRN-PPNet quantitatively. The experimental results show that the proposed method has a superior performance compared with the other state-of-the-art methods, and the average Dice, sensitivity and PPV on the randomly selected test data can reach 0.91, 0.94 and 0.89 respectively.
Copyright © 2019 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Automatic segmentation; End to end; Gliomas; Multi-modality magnetic resonance imaging; Pyramid pool net; Wide residual net

Year:  2019        PMID: 31154088     DOI: 10.1016/j.compmedimag.2019.04.001

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Comput Med Imaging Graph        ISSN: 0895-6111            Impact factor:   4.790


  1 in total

Review 1.  Magnetic resonance image-based brain tumour segmentation methods: A systematic review.

Authors:  Jayendra M Bhalodiya; Sarah N Lim Choi Keung; Theodoros N Arvanitis
Journal:  Digit Health       Date:  2022-03-16
  1 in total

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