Paper
23 February 2012 Towards exaggerated emphysema stereotypes
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Abstract
Classification is widely used in the context of medical image analysis and in order to illustrate the mechanism of a classifier, we introduce the notion of an exaggerated image stereotype based on training data and trained classifier. The stereotype of some image class of interest should emphasize/exaggerate the characteristic patterns in an image class and visualize the information the employed classifier relies on. This is useful for gaining insight into the classification and serves for comparison with the biological models of disease. In this work, we build exaggerated image stereotypes by optimizing an objective function which consists of a discriminative term based on the classification accuracy, and a generative term based on the class distributions. A gradient descent method based on iterated conditional modes (ICM) is employed for optimization. We use this idea with Fisher's linear discriminant rule and assume a multivariate normal distribution for samples within a class. The proposed framework is applied to computed tomography (CT) images of lung tissue with emphysema. The synthesized stereotypes illustrate the exaggerated patterns of lung tissue with emphysema, which is underpinned by three different quantitative evaluation methods.
© (2012) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
C. Chen, L. Sørensen, F. Lauze, C. Igel, M. Loog, A. Feragen, M. de Bruijne, and M. Nielsen "Towards exaggerated emphysema stereotypes", Proc. SPIE 8315, Medical Imaging 2012: Computer-Aided Diagnosis, 83150Q (23 February 2012); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.911398
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KEYWORDS
Emphysema

Lung

Tissues

Computed tomography

Medical imaging

Image classification

Statistical analysis

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