Literature DB >> 33246229

A deep learning framework for quality assessment and restoration in video endoscopy.

Sharib Ali1, Felix Zhou2, Adam Bailey3, Barbara Braden3, James E East3, Xin Lu4, Jens Rittscher5.   

Abstract

Endoscopy is a routine imaging technique used for both diagnosis and minimally invasive surgical treatment. Artifacts such as motion blur, bubbles, specular reflections, floating objects and pixel saturation impede the visual interpretation and the automated analysis of endoscopy videos. Given the widespread use of endoscopy in different clinical applications, robust and reliable identification of such artifacts and the automated restoration of corrupted video frames is a fundamental medical imaging problem. Existing state-of-the-art methods only deal with the detection and restoration of selected artifacts. However, typically endoscopy videos contain numerous artifacts which motivates to establish a comprehensive solution. In this paper, a fully automatic framework is proposed that can: 1) detect and classify six different artifacts, 2) segment artifact instances that have indefinable shapes, 3) provide a quality score for each frame, and 4) restore partially corrupted frames. To detect and classify different artifacts, the proposed framework exploits fast, multi-scale and single stage convolution neural network detector. In addition, we use an encoder-decoder model for pixel-wise segmentation of irregular shaped artifacts. A quality score is introduced to assess video frame quality and to predict image restoration success. Generative adversarial networks with carefully chosen regularization and training strategies for discriminator-generator networks are finally used to restore corrupted frames. The detector yields the highest mean average precision (mAP) of 45.7 and 34.7, respectively for 25% and 50% IoU thresholds, and the lowest computational time of 88 ms allowing for near real-time processing. The restoration models for blind deblurring, saturation correction and inpainting demonstrate significant improvements over previous methods. On a set of 10 test videos, an average of 68.7% of video frames successfully passed the quality score (≥0.9) after applying the proposed restoration framework thereby retaining 25% more frames compared to the raw videos. The importance of artifacts detection and their restoration on improved robustness of image analysis methods is also demonstrated in this work.
Copyright © 2020 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Keywords:  Convolution neural networks; Frame restoration; Multi-class artifact detection; Multi-class artifact segmentation; Video endoscopy

Mesh:

Year:  2020        PMID: 33246229     DOI: 10.1016/j.media.2020.101900

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Med Image Anal        ISSN: 1361-8415            Impact factor:   8.545


  3 in total

1.  Artifact- and content-specific quality assessment for MRI with image rulers.

Authors:  Ke Lei; Ali B Syed; Xucheng Zhu; John M Pauly; Shreyas S Vasanawala
Journal:  Med Image Anal       Date:  2022-01-20       Impact factor: 8.545

2.  Endoscopy Artefact Detection by Deep Transfer Learning of Baseline Models.

Authors:  Tang-Kai Yin; Kai-Lun Huang; Si-Rong Chiu; Yu-Qi Yang; Bao-Rong Chang
Journal:  J Digit Imaging       Date:  2022-04-27       Impact factor: 4.903

Review 3.  Deep learning for gastroscopic images: computer-aided techniques for clinicians.

Authors:  Ziyi Jin; Tianyuan Gan; Peng Wang; Zuoming Fu; Chongan Zhang; Qinglai Yan; Xueyong Zheng; Xiao Liang; Xuesong Ye
Journal:  Biomed Eng Online       Date:  2022-02-11       Impact factor: 2.819

  3 in total

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