| Literature DB >> 3363122 |
J W Oestmann1, D C Kushner, P M Bourgouin, H J Llewellyn, B W Mockbee, R Greene.
Abstract
The authors studied the impact of edge enhancement and gray scale polarity reversal on the detection of subtle lung cancers. Three experienced readers reviewed 46 biopsy-proved subtle lung cancers and 46 normal controls on chest radiographs that had been digitized into a 1,024 X 1,536-pixel matrix 8 bits deep. Receiver-operating characteristics (ROC) analysis of 1,656 pooled observations indicated that performance was best with the unmodified images (ROC area = 0.83), degraded by moderate enhancement of medium frequencies (ROC area = 0.80), and markedly impaired by severe enhancement of low frequencies (ROC area = 0.69). Gray scale polarity reversal further degraded performance (unenhanced ROC area = 0.74; moderately enhanced ROC area = 0.76; severely enhanced ROC area = 0.76). The authors conclude that edge enhancement and gray scale polarity reversal can impair the detectability of subtle lung cancers on digitized radiographs of medium resolution.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 1988 PMID: 3363122 DOI: 10.1148/radiology.167.3.3363122
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Radiology ISSN: 0033-8419 Impact factor: 11.105