scholarly journals A Fully Automatic Procedure for Brain Tumor Segmentation from Multi-Spectral MRI Records Using Ensemble Learning and Atlas-Based Data Enhancement

2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (2) ◽  
pp. 564
Author(s):  
Ágnes Győrfi ◽  
László Szilágyi ◽  
Levente Kovács

The accurate and reliable segmentation of gliomas from magnetic resonance image (MRI) data has an important role in diagnosis, intervention planning, and monitoring the tumor’s evolution during and after therapy. Segmentation has serious anatomical obstacles like the great variety of the tumor’s location, size, shape, and appearance and the modified position of normal tissues. Other phenomena like intensity inhomogeneity and the lack of standard intensity scale in MRI data represent further difficulties. This paper proposes a fully automatic brain tumor segmentation procedure that attempts to handle all the above problems. Having its foundations on the MRI data provided by the MICCAI Brain Tumor Segmentation (BraTS) Challenges, the procedure consists of three main phases. The first pre-processing phase prepares the MRI data to be suitable for supervised classification, by attempting to fix missing data, suppressing the intensity inhomogeneity, normalizing the histogram of observed data channels, generating additional morphological, gradient-based, and Gabor-wavelet features, and optionally applying atlas-based data enhancement. The second phase accomplishes the main classification process using ensembles of binary decision trees and provides an initial, intermediary labeling for each pixel of test records. The last phase reevaluates these intermediary labels using a random forest classifier, then deploys a spatial region growing-based structural validation of suspected tumors, thus achieving a high-quality final segmentation result. The accuracy of the procedure is evaluated using the multi-spectral MRI records of the BraTS 2015 and BraTS 2019 training data sets. The procedure achieves high-quality segmentation results, characterized by average Dice similarity scores of up to 86%.

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Radhika Malhotra ◽  
Jasleen Saini ◽  
Barjinder Singh Saini ◽  
Savita Gupta

In the past decade, there has been a remarkable evolution of convolutional neural networks (CNN) for biomedical image processing. These improvements are inculcated in the basic deep learning-based models for computer-aided detection and prognosis of various ailments. But implementation of these CNN based networks is highly dependent on large data in case of supervised learning processes. This is needed to tackle overfitting issues which is a major concern in supervised techniques. Overfitting refers to the phenomenon when a network starts learning specific patterns of the input such that it fits well on the training data but leads to poor generalization abilities on unseen data. The accessibility of enormous quantity of data limits the field of medical domain research. This paper focuses on utility of data augmentation (DA) techniques, which is a well-recognized solution to the problem of limited data. The experiments were performed on the Brain Tumor Segmentation (BraTS) dataset which is available online. The results signify that different DA approaches have upgraded the accuracies for segmenting brain tumor boundaries using CNN based model.


Author(s):  
Mihajlo Hasanu ◽  
Hristina Ambaroska ◽  
Blagoj Ristevski

Author(s):  
Manu Gupta ◽  
K.S. Gayatri ◽  
K. Harika ◽  
B.V.V.S.N. Prabhakar Rao ◽  
Venkateswaran Rajagopalan ◽  
...  

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