scholarly journals PixelBNN: Augmenting the PixelCNN with Batch Normalization and the Presentation of a Fast Architecture for Retinal Vessel Segmentation

2019 ◽  
Vol 5 (2) ◽  
pp. 26 ◽  
Author(s):  
Henry Leopold ◽  
Jeff Orchard ◽  
John Zelek ◽  
Vasudevan Lakshminarayanan

Analysis of retinal fundus images is essential for eye-care physicians in the diagnosis, care and treatment of patients. Accurate fundus and/or retinal vessel maps give rise to longitudinal studies able to utilize multimedia image registration and disease/condition status measurements, as well as applications in surgery preparation and biometrics. The segmentation of retinal morphology has numerous applications in assessing ophthalmologic and cardiovascular disease pathologies. Computer-aided segmentation of the vasculature has proven to be a challenge, mainly due to inconsistencies such as noise and variations in hue and brightness that can greatly reduce the quality of fundus images. The goal of this work is to collate different key performance indicators (KPIs) and state-of-the-art methods applied to this task, frame computational efficiency–performance trade-offs under varying degrees of information loss using common datasets, and introduce PixelBNN, a highly efficient deep method for automating the segmentation of fundus morphologies. The model was trained, tested and cross tested on the DRIVE, STARE and CHASE_DB1 retinal vessel segmentation datasets. Performance was evaluated using G-mean, Mathews Correlation Coefficient and F1-score, with the main success measure being computation speed. The network was 8.5× faster than the current state-of-the-art at test time and performed comparatively well, considering a 5× to 19× reduction in information from resizing images during preprocessing.

PLoS ONE ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 12 (12) ◽  
pp. e0188939 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nogol Memari ◽  
Abd Rahman Ramli ◽  
M. Iqbal Bin Saripan ◽  
Syamsiah Mashohor ◽  
Mehrdad Moghbel

Author(s):  
Shuang Xu ◽  
Zhiqiang Chen ◽  
Weiyi Cao ◽  
Feng Zhang ◽  
Bo Tao

Retinal vessels are the only deep micro vessels that can be observed in human body, the accurate identification of which has great significance on the diagnosis of hypertension, diabetes and other diseases. To this end, a retinal vessel segmentation algorithm based on residual convolution neural network is proposed according to the characteristics of the retinal vessels on fundus images. Improved residual attention module and deep supervision module are utilized, in which the low-level and high-level feature graphs are joined to construct the encoder-decoder network structure, and atrous convolution is introduced to the pyramid pooling. The experiments result on the fundus image data set DRIVE and STARE show that this algorithm can obtain complete retinal vessel segmentation as well as connected vessel stems and terminals. The average accuracy on DRIVE and STARE reaches 95.90 and 96.88%, and the average specificity is 98.85 and 97.85%, which shows superior performance compared to other methods. This algorithm is verified feasible and effective for retinal vessel segmentation of fundus images and has the ability to detect more capillaries.


2016 ◽  
Vol 25 (3) ◽  
pp. 503-511 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chengzhang Zhu ◽  
Beiji Zou ◽  
Jinkai Cui ◽  
Yao Xiang ◽  
Hui Wu

2017 ◽  
Vol 55 ◽  
pp. 68-77 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chengzhang Zhu ◽  
Beiji Zou ◽  
Rongchang Zhao ◽  
Jinkai Cui ◽  
Xuanchu Duan ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 2070 (1) ◽  
pp. 012104
Author(s):  
Sushma Nagdeote ◽  
Sapna Prabhu

Abstract This paper deals with the new segmentation techniques for retinal blood vessels on fundus images. This technique aims at extracting thin vessels to reduce the intensity difference between thick and thin vessels. This paper proposes the modified UNet model by incorporating ResNet blocks into it which includes structured prediction. In this work we generate the visualization of blood vessels from retinal fundus image for two loss functions namely cross entropy loss and Dice loss where the network classifies several pixels simultaneously. The results shows higher accuracy by considering a much more expressive UNet algorithm and outperforms the past algorithms for Retinal Vessel Segmentation. The benefits of this approach will be demonstrated empirically.


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