scholarly journals Accelerating Super-Resolution and Visual Task Analysis in Medical Images

2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (12) ◽  
pp. 4282
Author(s):  
Ghada Zamzmi ◽  
Sivaramakrishnan Rajaraman ◽  
Sameer Antani

Medical images are acquired at different resolutions based on clinical goals or available technology. In general, however, high-resolution images with fine structural details are preferred for visual task analysis. Recognizing this significance, several deep learning networks have been proposed to enhance medical images for reliable automated interpretation. These deep networks are often computationally complex and require a massive number of parameters, which restrict them to highly capable computing platforms with large memory banks. In this paper, we propose an efficient deep learning approach, called Hydra, which simultaneously reduces computational complexity and improves performance. The Hydra consists of a trunk and several computing heads. The trunk is a super-resolution model that learns the mapping from low-resolution to high-resolution images. It has a simple architecture that is trained using multiple scales at once to minimize a proposed learning-loss function. We also propose to append multiple task-specific heads to the trained Hydra trunk for simultaneous learning of multiple visual tasks in medical images. The Hydra is evaluated on publicly available chest X-ray image collections to perform image enhancement, lung segmentation, and abnormality classification. Our experimental results support our claims and demonstrate that the proposed approach can improve the performance of super-resolution and visual task analysis in medical images at a remarkably reduced computational cost.

2014 ◽  
Vol 568-570 ◽  
pp. 659-662
Author(s):  
Xue Jun Zhang ◽  
Bing Liang Hu

The paper proposes a new approach to single-image super resolution (SR), which is based on sparse representation. Previous researchers just focus on the global intensive patch, without local intensive patch. The performance of dictionary trained by the local saliency intensive patch is more significant. Motivated by this, we joined the saliency detection to detect marked area in the image. We proposed a sparse representation for saliency patch of the low-resolution input, and used the coefficients of this representation to generate the high-resolution output. Compared to precious approaches which simply sample a large amount of image patch pairs, the saliency dictionary pair is a more compact representation of the patch pairs, reducing the computational cost substantially. Through the experiment, we demonstrate that our algorithm generates high-resolution images that are competitive or even superior in quality to images produced by other similar SR methods.


Author(s):  
Xiongxiong Xue ◽  
Zhenqi Han ◽  
Weiqin Tong ◽  
Mingqi Li ◽  
Lizhuang Liu

Video super-resolution, which utilizes the relevant information of several low-resolution frames to generate high-resolution images, is a challenging task. One possible solution called sliding window method tries to divide the generation of high-resolution video sequences into independent sub-tasks, and only adjacent low-resolution images are used to estimate the high-resolution version of the central low-resolution image. Another popular method named recurrent algorithm proposes to utilize not only the low-resolution images but also the generated high-resolution images of previous frames to generate the high-resolution image. However, both methods have some unavoidable disadvantages. The former one usually leads to bad temporal consistency and requires higher computational cost while the latter method always can not make full use of information contained by optical flow or any other calculated features. Thus more investigations need to be done to explore the balance between these two methods. In this work, a bidirectional frame recurrent video super-resolution method is proposed. To be specific, a reverse training is proposed that the generated high-resolution frame is also utilized to help estimate the high-resolution version of the former frame. With the contribution of reverse training and the forward training, the idea of bidirectional recurrent method not only guarantees the temporal consistency but also make full use of the adjacent information due to the bidirectional training operation while the computational cost is acceptable. Experimental results demonstrate that the bidirectional super-resolution framework gives remarkable performance that it solves the time-related problems when the generated high-resolution image is impressive compared with recurrent-based video super-resolution method.


2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (23) ◽  
pp. 8749
Author(s):  
Xiongxiong Xue ◽  
Zhenqi Han ◽  
Weiqin Tong ◽  
Mingqi Li ◽  
Lizhuang Liu

Video super-resolution is a challenging task. One possible solution, called the sliding window method, tries to divide the generation of high-resolution video sequences into independent subtasks. Another popular method, named the recurrent algorithm, utilizes the generated high-resolution images of previous frames to generate the high-resolution image. However, both methods have some unavoidable disadvantages. The former method usually leads to bad temporal consistency and has higher computational cost, while the latter method cannot always make full use of information contained by optical flow or any other calculated features. Thus, more investigations need to be done to explore the balance between these two methods. In this work, a bidirectional frame recurrent video super-resolution method is proposed. To be specific, reverse training is proposed that also utilizes a generated high-resolution frame to help estimate the high-resolution version of the former frame. The bidirectional recurrent method guarantees temporal consistency and also makes full use of the adjacent information due to the bidirectional training operation, while the computational cost is acceptable. Experimental results demonstrate that the bidirectional super-resolution framework gives remarkable performance and it solves time-related problems.


2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (16) ◽  
pp. 3268 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yunzhe Xiao ◽  
Zhong Ming

Vision-based 1D barcode reading has been the subject of extensive research in recent years due to the high demand for automation in various industrial settings. With the aim of detecting the image region of 1D barcodes, existing approaches are both slow and imprecise. Deep-learning-based methods can locate the 1D barcode region fast but lack an adequate and accurate segmentation process; while simple geometric-based techniques perform weakly in terms of localization and take unnecessary computational cost when processing high-resolution images. We propose integrating the deep-learning and geometric approaches with the objective of tackling robust barcode localization in the presence of complicated backgrounds and accurately detecting the barcode within the localized region. Our integrated real-time solution combines the advantages of the two methods. Furthermore, there is no need to manually tune parameters in our approach. Through extensive experimentation on standard benchmarks, we show that our integrated approach outperforms the state-of-the-art methods by at least 5%.


Algorithms ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (8) ◽  
pp. 236
Author(s):  
Haoran Xu ◽  
Xinya Li ◽  
Kaiyi Zhang ◽  
Yanbai He ◽  
Haoran Fan ◽  
...  

Recently, deep learning has enabled a huge leap forward in image inpainting. However, due to the memory and computational limitation, most existing methods are able to handle only low-resolution inputs, typically less than 1 K. With the improvement of Internet transmission capacity and mobile device cameras, the resolution of image and video sources available to users via the cloud or locally is increasing. For high-resolution images, the common inpainting methods simply upsample the inpainted result of the shrinked image to yield a blurry result. In recent years, there is an urgent need to reconstruct the missing high-frequency information in high-resolution images and generate sharp texture details. Hence, we propose a general deep learning framework for high-resolution image inpainting, which first hallucinates a semantically continuous blurred result using low-resolution inpainting and suppresses computational overhead. Then the sharp high-frequency details with original resolution are reconstructed using super-resolution refinement. Experimentally, our method achieves inspiring inpainting quality on 2K and 4K resolution images, ahead of the state-of-the-art high-resolution inpainting technique. This framework is expected to be popularized for high-resolution image editing tasks on personal computers and mobile devices in the future.


Author(s):  
Yanteng Zhang ◽  
Qizhi Teng ◽  
Linbo Qing ◽  
Yan Liu ◽  
Xiaohai He

Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is a degenerative brain disease and the most common cause of dementia. In recent years, with the widespread application of artificial intelligence in the medical field, various deep learning-based methods have been applied for AD detection using sMRI images. Many of these networks achieved AD vs HC (Healthy Control) classification accuracy of up to 90%but with a large number of computational parameters and floating point operations (FLOPs). In this paper, we adopt a novel ghost module, which uses a series of cheap operations of linear transformation to generate more feature maps, embedded into our designed ResNet architecture for task of AD vs HC classification. According to experiments on the OASIS dataset, our lightweight network achieves an optimistic accuracy of 97.92%and its total parameters are dozens of times smaller than state-of-the-art deep learning networks. Our proposed AD classification network achieves better performance while the computational cost is reduced significantly.


2018 ◽  
Vol 10 (11) ◽  
pp. 1768 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hui Yang ◽  
Penghai Wu ◽  
Xuedong Yao ◽  
Yanlan Wu ◽  
Biao Wang ◽  
...  

Building extraction from very high resolution (VHR) imagery plays an important role in urban planning, disaster management, navigation, updating geographic databases, and several other geospatial applications. Compared with the traditional building extraction approaches, deep learning networks have recently shown outstanding performance in this task by using both high-level and low-level feature maps. However, it is difficult to utilize different level features rationally with the present deep learning networks. To tackle this problem, a novel network based on DenseNets and the attention mechanism was proposed, called the dense-attention network (DAN). The DAN contains an encoder part and a decoder part which are separately composed of lightweight DenseNets and a spatial attention fusion module. The proposed encoder–decoder architecture can strengthen feature propagation and effectively bring higher-level feature information to suppress the low-level feature and noises. Experimental results based on public international society for photogrammetry and remote sensing (ISPRS) datasets with only red–green–blue (RGB) images demonstrated that the proposed DAN achieved a higher score (96.16% overall accuracy (OA), 92.56% F1 score, 90.56% mean intersection over union (MIOU), less training and response time and higher-quality value) when compared with other deep learning methods.


2022 ◽  
Vol 14 (2) ◽  
pp. 265
Author(s):  
Yanjun Wang ◽  
Shaochun Li ◽  
Fei Teng ◽  
Yunhao Lin ◽  
Mengjie Wang ◽  
...  

Accurate roof information of buildings can be obtained from UAV high-resolution images. The large-scale accurate recognition of roof types (such as gabled, flat, hipped, complex and mono-pitched roofs) of rural buildings is crucial for rural planning and construction. At present, most UAV high-resolution optical images only have red, green and blue (RGB) band information, which aggravates the problems of inter-class similarity and intra-class variability of image features. Furthermore, the different roof types of rural buildings are complex, spatially scattered, and easily covered by vegetation, which in turn leads to the low accuracy of roof type identification by existing methods. In response to the above problems, this paper proposes a method for identifying roof types of complex rural buildings based on visible high-resolution remote sensing images from UAVs. First, the fusion of deep learning networks with different visual features is investigated to analyze the effect of the different feature combinations of the visible difference vegetation index (VDVI) and Sobel edge detection features and UAV visible images on model recognition of rural building roof types. Secondly, an improved Mask R-CNN model is proposed to learn more complex features of different types of images of building roofs by using the ResNet152 feature extraction network with migration learning. After we obtained roof type recognition results in two test areas, we evaluated the accuracy of the results using the confusion matrix and obtained the following conclusions: (1) the model with RGB images incorporating Sobel edge detection features has the highest accuracy and enables the model to recognize more and more accurately the roof types of different morphological rural buildings, and the model recognition accuracy (Kappa coefficient (KC)) compared to that of RGB images is on average improved by 0.115; (2) compared with the original Mask R-CNN, U-Net, DeeplabV3 and PSPNet deep learning models, the improved Mask R-CNN model has the highest accuracy in recognizing the roof types of rural buildings, with F1-score, KC and OA averaging 0.777, 0.821 and 0.905, respectively. The method can obtain clear and accurate profiles and types of rural building roofs, and can be extended for green roof suitability evaluation, rooftop solar potential assessment, and other building roof surveys, management and planning.


Author(s):  
Fuqi Mao ◽  
Xiaohan Guan ◽  
Ruoyu Wang ◽  
Wen Yue

As an important tool to study the microstructure and properties of materials, High Resolution Transmission Electron Microscope (HRTEM) images can obtain the lattice fringe image (reflecting the crystal plane spacing information), structure image and individual atom image (which reflects the configuration of atoms or atomic groups in crystal structure). Despite the rapid development of HTTEM devices, HRTEM images still have limited achievable resolution for human visual system. With the rapid development of deep learning technology in recent years, researchers are actively exploring the Super-resolution (SR) model based on deep learning, and the model has reached the current best level in various SR benchmarks. Using SR to reconstruct high-resolution HRTEM image is helpful to the material science research. However, there is one core issue that has not been resolved: most of these super-resolution methods require the training data to exist in pairs. In actual scenarios, especially for HRTEM images, there are no corresponding HR images. To reconstruct high quality HRTEM image, a novel Super-Resolution architecture for HRTEM images is proposed in this paper. Borrowing the idea from Dual Regression Networks (DRN), we introduce an additional dual regression structure to ESRGAN, by training the model with unpaired HRTEM images and paired nature images. Results of extensive benchmark experiments demonstrate that the proposed method achieves better performance than the most resent SISR methods with both quantitative and visual results.


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