Classification of Skin Cancer Dermoscopy Images using Transfer Learning

Author(s):  
Haseeb Younis ◽  
Muhammad Hamza Bhatti ◽  
Muhammad Azeem
Author(s):  
V. Akash Kumar ◽  
Vijaya Mishra ◽  
Monika Arora

The inhibition of healthy cells creating improper controlling process of the human body system indicates the occurrence of growth of cancerous cells. The cluster of such cells leads to the development of tumor. The observation of this type of abnormal skin pigmentation is done using an effective tool called Dermoscopy. However, these dermatoscopic images possess a great challenge for diagnosis. Considering the characteristics of dermatoscopic images, transfer learning is an appropriate approach of automatically classifying the images based on the respective categories. An automatic identification of skin cancer not only saves human life but also helps in detecting its growth at an earlier stage which saves medical practitioner’s effort and time. A newly predicted model has been proposed for classifying the skin cancer as benign or malignant by DCNN with transfer learning and its pre-trained models such as VGG 16, VGG 19, ResNet 50, ResNet 101, and Inception V3. The proposed methodology aims at examining the efficiency of pre-trained models and transfer learning approach for the classification tasks and opens new dimensions of research in the field of medicines using imaging technique which can be implementable in real-time applications.


Author(s):  
Danny Joel Devarapalli ◽  
Venkata Sai Dheeraj Mavilla ◽  
Sai Prashanth Reddy Karri ◽  
Harshit Gorijavolu ◽  
Sri Anjaneya Nimmakuri

Author(s):  
Qaiser Abbas ◽  
Farheen Ramzan ◽  
Muhammad Usman Ghani

AbstractAcral melanoma (AM) is a rare and lethal type of skin cancer. It can be diagnosed by expert dermatologists, using dermoscopic imaging. It is challenging for dermatologists to diagnose melanoma because of the very minor differences between melanoma and non-melanoma cancers. Most of the research on skin cancer diagnosis is related to the binary classification of lesions into melanoma and non-melanoma. However, to date, limited research has been conducted on the classification of melanoma subtypes. The current study investigated the effectiveness of dermoscopy and deep learning in classifying melanoma subtypes, such as, AM. In this study, we present a novel deep learning model, developed to classify skin cancer. We utilized a dermoscopic image dataset from the Yonsei University Health System South Korea for the classification of skin lesions. Various image processing and data augmentation techniques have been applied to develop a robust automated system for AM detection. Our custom-built model is a seven-layered deep convolutional network that was trained from scratch. Additionally, transfer learning was utilized to compare the performance of our model, where AlexNet and ResNet-18 were modified, fine-tuned, and trained on the same dataset. We achieved improved results from our proposed model with an accuracy of more than 90 % for AM and benign nevus, respectively. Additionally, using the transfer learning approach, we achieved an average accuracy of nearly 97 %, which is comparable to that of state-of-the-art methods. From our analysis and results, we found that our model performed well and was able to effectively classify skin cancer. Our results show that the proposed system can be used by dermatologists in the clinical decision-making process for the early diagnosis of AM.


Sensors ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 21 (23) ◽  
pp. 8142
Author(s):  
Satin Jain ◽  
Udit Singhania ◽  
Balakrushna Tripathy ◽  
Emad Abouel Nasr ◽  
Mohamed K. Aboudaif ◽  
...  

One of the major health concerns for human society is skin cancer. When the pigments producing skin color turn carcinogenic, this disease gets contracted. A skin cancer diagnosis is a challenging process for dermatologists as many skin cancer pigments may appear similar in appearance. Hence, early detection of lesions (which form the base of skin cancer) is definitely critical and useful to completely cure the patients suffering from skin cancer. Significant progress has been made in developing automated tools for the diagnosis of skin cancer to assist dermatologists. The worldwide acceptance of artificial intelligence-supported tools has permitted usage of the enormous collection of images of lesions and benevolent sores approved by histopathology. This paper performs a comparative analysis of six different transfer learning nets for multi-class skin cancer classification by taking the HAM10000 dataset. We used replication of images of classes with low frequencies to counter the imbalance in the dataset. The transfer learning nets that were used in the analysis were VGG19, InceptionV3, InceptionResNetV2, ResNet50, Xception, and MobileNet. Results demonstrate that replication is suitable for this task, achieving high classification accuracies and F-measures with lower false negatives. It is inferred that Xception Net outperforms the rest of the transfer learning nets used for the study, with an accuracy of 90.48. It also has the highest recall, precision, and F-Measure values.


Author(s):  
Zinah Mohsin Arkah ◽  
Dalya S. Al-Dulaimi ◽  
Ahlam R. Khekan

<p>Skin cancer is an example of the most dangerous disease. Early diagnosis of skin cancer can save many people’s lives. Manual classification methods are time-consuming and costly. Deep learning has been proposed for the automated classification of skin cancer. Although deep learning showed impressive performance in several medical imaging tasks, it requires a big number of images to achieve a good performance. The skin cancer classification task suffers from providing deep learning with sufficient data due to the expensive annotation process and required experts. One of the most used solutions is transfer learning of pre-trained models of the ImageNet dataset. However, the learned features of pre-trained models are different from skin cancer image features. To end this, we introduce a novel approach of transfer learning by training the pre-trained models of the ImageNet (VGG, GoogleNet, and ResNet50) on a large number of unlabelled skin cancer images, first. We then train them on a small number of labeled skin images. Our experimental results proved that the proposed method is efficient by achieving an accuracy of 84% with ResNet50 when directly trained with a small number of labeled skin and 93.7% when trained with the proposed approach.</p>


Author(s):  
Saleh Alaraimi ◽  
Kenneth E. Okedu ◽  
Hugo Tianfield ◽  
Richard Holden ◽  
Omair Uthmani

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