Automatic x-ray image recognition

1981 ◽  
Vol 15 (3) ◽  
pp. 67-71
Author(s):  
V. A. Mikhailov ◽  
A. B. Vol'pert
Keyword(s):  
Author(s):  
Yun Jiang ◽  
Junyu Zhuo ◽  
Juan Zhang ◽  
Xiao Xiao

With the extensive attention and research of the scholars in deep learning, the convolutional restricted Boltzmann machine (CRBM) model based on restricted Boltzmann machine (RBM) is widely used in image recognition, speech recognition, etc. However, time consuming training still seems to be an unneglectable issue. To solve this problem, this paper mainly uses optimized parallel CRBM based on Spark, and proposes a parallel comparison divergence algorithm based on Spark and uses it to train the CRBM model to improve the training speed. The experiments show that the method is faster than traditional sequential algorithm. We train the CRBM with the method and apply it to breast X-ray image classification. The experiments show that it can improve the precision and the speed of training compared with traditional algorithm.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (23) ◽  
pp. 11185
Author(s):  
Zhi-Peng Jiang ◽  
Yi-Yang Liu ◽  
Zhen-En Shao ◽  
Ko-Wei Huang

Image recognition has been applied to many fields, but it is relatively rarely applied to medical images. Recent significant deep learning progress for image recognition has raised strong research interest in medical image recognition. First of all, we found the prediction result using the VGG16 model on failed pneumonia X-ray images. Thus, this paper proposes IVGG13 (Improved Visual Geometry Group-13), a modified VGG16 model for classification pneumonia X-rays images. Open-source thoracic X-ray images acquired from the Kaggle platform were employed for pneumonia recognition, but only a few data were obtained, and datasets were unbalanced after classification, either of which can result in extremely poor recognition from trained neural network models. Therefore, we applied augmentation pre-processing to compensate for low data volume and poorly balanced datasets. The original datasets without data augmentation were trained using the proposed and some well-known convolutional neural networks, such as LeNet AlexNet, GoogLeNet and VGG16. In the experimental results, the recognition rates and other evaluation criteria, such as precision, recall and f-measure, were evaluated for each model. This process was repeated for augmented and balanced datasets, with greatly improved metrics such as precision, recall and F1-measure. The proposed IVGG13 model produced superior outcomes with the F1-measure compared with the current best practice convolutional neural networks for medical image recognition, confirming data augmentation effectively improved model accuracy.


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