Automated classification of colorectal adenoma-dysplasia-carcinoma in tissue biopsies using artificial intelligence based image evaluation

2012 ◽  
Vol 50 (05) ◽  
Author(s):  
B Wichmann ◽  
P Ittzés ◽  
G Valcz ◽  
D Szabó ◽  
B Barták ◽  
...  
Author(s):  
Richard Leibbrandt ◽  
Dongqiang Yang ◽  
Darius Pfitzner ◽  
David Powers ◽  
Pru Mitchell ◽  
...  

This paper reports on a joint proof of concept project undertaken by researchers from the Flinders University Artificial Intelligence Laboratory in partnership with information managers from the Education Network Australia (edna) team at Education Services Australia to address the question of whether artificial intelligence techniques could be employed to help with creation and consistency of learning resource metadata and improve the efficiency of digital collection workflows? The results show some success with automated subject categorisation on a small sample, and the researchers conclude that automated classification based on artificial intelligence is useful as a means of supplementing and assisting human classification, but is not at this stage a replacement for human classification of educational resources.


2021 ◽  
pp. 101526
Author(s):  
Michael A. Tabak ◽  
Kevin L. Murray ◽  
Ashley M. Reed ◽  
John A. Lombardi ◽  
Kimberly J. Bay

2021 ◽  
Vol 132 ◽  
pp. S287-S288
Author(s):  
Jianling Ji ◽  
Ryan Schmidt ◽  
Westley Sherman ◽  
Ryan Peralta ◽  
Megan Roytman ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Amira S. Ashour ◽  
Merihan M. Eissa ◽  
Maram A. Wahba ◽  
Radwa A. Elsawy ◽  
Hamada Fathy Elgnainy ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Song-Quan Ong ◽  
Hamdan Ahmad ◽  
Gomesh Nair ◽  
Pradeep Isawasan ◽  
Abdul Hafiz Ab Majid

AbstractClassification of Aedes aegypti (Linnaeus) and Aedes albopictus (Skuse) by humans remains challenging. We proposed a highly accessible method to develop a deep learning (DL) model and implement the model for mosquito image classification by using hardware that could regulate the development process. In particular, we constructed a dataset with 4120 images of Aedes mosquitoes that were older than 12 days old and had common morphological features that disappeared, and we illustrated how to set up supervised deep convolutional neural networks (DCNNs) with hyperparameter adjustment. The model application was first conducted by deploying the model externally in real time on three different generations of mosquitoes, and the accuracy was compared with human expert performance. Our results showed that both the learning rate and epochs significantly affected the accuracy, and the best-performing hyperparameters achieved an accuracy of more than 98% at classifying mosquitoes, which showed no significant difference from human-level performance. We demonstrated the feasibility of the method to construct a model with the DCNN when deployed externally on mosquitoes in real time.


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