Plane identification in fetal ultrasound images using saliency maps and convolutional neural networks

Author(s):  
Ashnil Kumar ◽  
Pradeeba Sridar ◽  
Ann Quinton ◽  
R. Krishna Kumar ◽  
Dagan Feng ◽  
...  
IEEE Access ◽  
2021 ◽  
pp. 1-1
Author(s):  
Vishal Singh ◽  
Pradeeba Sridar ◽  
Jinman Kim ◽  
Ralph Nanan ◽  
N. Poornima ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Amr Farahat ◽  
Christoph Reichert ◽  
Catherine M. Sweeney-Reed ◽  
Hermann Hinrichs

ABSTRACTObjectiveConvolutional neural networks (CNNs) have proven successful as function approximators and have therefore been used for classification problems including electroencephalography (EEG) signal decoding for brain-computer interfaces (BCI). Artificial neural networks, however, are considered black boxes, because they usually have thousands of parameters, making interpretation of their internal processes challenging. Here we systematically evaluate the use of CNNs for EEG signal decoding and investigate a method for visualizing the CNN model decision process.ApproachWe developed a CNN model to decode the covert focus of attention from EEG event-related potentials during object selection. We compared the CNN and the commonly used linear discriminant analysis (LDA) classifier performance, applied to datasets with different dimensionality, and analyzed transfer learning capacity. Moreover, we validated the impact of single model components by systematically altering the model. Furthermore, we investigated the use of saliency maps as a tool for visualizing the spatial and temporal features driving the model output.Main resultsThe CNN model and the LDA classifier achieved comparable accuracy on the lower-dimensional dataset, but CNN exceeded LDA performance significantly on the higher-dimensional dataset (without hypothesis-driven preprocessing), achieving an average decoding accuracy of 90.7% (chance level = 8.3%). Parallel convolutions, tanh or ELU activation functions, and dropout regularization proved valuable for model performance, whereas the sequential convolutions, ReLU activation function, and batch normalization components, reduced accuracy or yielded no significant difference. Saliency maps revealed meaningful features, displaying the typical spatial distribution and latency of the P300 component expected during this task.SignificanceFollowing systematic evaluation, we provide recommendations for when and how to use CNN models in EEG decoding. Moreover, we propose a new approach for investigating the neural correlates of a cognitive task by training CNN models on raw high-dimensional EEG data and utilizing saliency maps for relevant feature extraction.


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