A medical image segmentation method based on multi-scale feature extraction

Author(s):  
Rong Zhao ◽  
Weidan Yan ◽  
Chao Zhou ◽  
Dengyin Zhang
Author(s):  
Zhenzhen Yang ◽  
Pengfei Xu ◽  
Yongpeng Yang ◽  
Bing-Kun Bao

The U-Net has become the most popular structure in medical image segmentation in recent years. Although its performance for medical image segmentation is outstanding, a large number of experiments demonstrate that the classical U-Net network architecture seems to be insufficient when the size of segmentation targets changes and the imbalance happens between target and background in different forms of segmentation. To improve the U-Net network architecture, we develop a new architecture named densely connected U-Net (DenseUNet) network in this article. The proposed DenseUNet network adopts a dense block to improve the feature extraction capability and employs a multi-feature fuse block fusing feature maps of different levels to increase the accuracy of feature extraction. In addition, in view of the advantages of the cross entropy and the dice loss functions, a new loss function for the DenseUNet network is proposed to deal with the imbalance between target and background. Finally, we test the proposed DenseUNet network and compared it with the multi-resolutional U-Net (MultiResUNet) and the classic U-Net networks on three different datasets. The experimental results show that the DenseUNet network has significantly performances compared with the MultiResUNet and the classic U-Net networks.


2014 ◽  
Vol 989-994 ◽  
pp. 1088-1092
Author(s):  
Chen Guang Zhang ◽  
Yan Zhang ◽  
Xia Huan Zhang

In this paper, a novel interactive medical image segmentation method called SMOPL is proposed. This method only needs marking some pixels on foreground region for segmentation. To do this, SMOPL characterize the inherent correlations among foreground and background pixels as Hilbert-Schmidt independence. By maximizing the independence and minimizing the smoothness of labels on instance neighbor graph simultaneously, SMOPL gets the sufficiently smooth confidences of both positive and negative classes in absence of negative training examples. Then a image segmentation can be obtained by assigning each pixel to the label for which the greatest confidence is calculated. Experiments on real-world medical images show that SMOPL is robust to get a high-quality segmentation with only positive label examples.


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