Inflammation of the lungs, called pneumonia, is a disease characterized by inflammation of the air sacs that interfere with the exchange of oxygen and carbon dioxide. It is caused by a variety of infectious organisms, including viruses, bacteria, fungus, and parasites. Pneumonia is more common in people who have pre-existing lung diseases or compromised immune systems, and it primarily affects small children and the elderly. Diagnosis of pneumonia can be difficult, especially when relying on medical imaging, because symptoms may not be immediately apparent. Convolutional neural networks (CNNs) have recently shown potential in medical imaging applications. A CNN-based deep learning model is being built as part of ongoing research to aid in the detection of pneumonia using chest X-ray images. The dataset used for training and evaluation includes images of people with normal lung conditions as well as photos of people with pneumonia. Various preprocessing procedures, such as data augmentation, normalization, and scaling, were used to improve the accuracy of pneumonia diagnosis and extract significant features. In this study, a framework for deep learning with four pre-trained CNN models—InceptionNet, ResNet, VGG16, and DenseNet—was used. To take use of its key advantages, transfer learning utilizing DenseNet was used. During training, the loss function was minimized using the Adam optimizer. The suggested approach seeks to improve early diagnosis and enable fast intervention for pneumonia cases by leveraging the advantages of several CNN models. The outcomes show that CNN-based deep learning models may successfully diagnose pneumonia in chest X-ray pictures.
Retinal disorders, such as diabetic retinopathy, glaucoma, macular edema, and vein occlusions, are significant contributors to global vision impairment. These conditions frequently remain symptomless until patients suffer severe vision deterioration, underscoring the critical importance of early diagnosis. Fundus images serve as a valuable resource for identifying the initial indicators of these ailments, particularly by examining various characteristics of retinal blood vessels, such as their length, width, tortuosity, and branching patterns. Traditionally, healthcare practitioners often rely on manual retinal vessel segmentation, a process that is both time-consuming and intricate, demanding specialized expertise. However, this approach poses a notable challenge since its precision and consistency heavily rely on the availability of highly skilled professionals. To surmount these challenges, there is an urgent demand for an automatic and efficient method for retinal vessel segmentation and classification employing computer vision techniques, which form the foundation of biomedical imaging. Numerous researchers have put forth techniques for blood vessel segmentation, broadly categorized into machine learning, filtering-based, and model-based methods. Machine learning methods categorize pixels as either vessels or non-vessels, employing classifiers trained on hand-annotated images. Subsequently, these techniques extract features using 7D feature vectors and apply neural network classification. Additional post-processing steps are used to bridge gaps and eliminate isolated pixels. On the other hand, filtering-based approaches employ morphological operators within morphological image processing, capitalizing on predefined shapes to filter out objects from the background. However, this technique often treats larger blood vessels as cohesive structures. Model-based methods leverage vessel models to identify retinal blood vessels, but they are sensitive to parameter selection, necessitating careful choices to simultaneously detect thin and large vessels effectively. Our proposed research endeavors to conduct a thorough and empirical evaluation of the effectiveness of automated segmentation and classification techniques for identifying eye-related diseases, particularly diabetic retinopathy and glaucoma. This evaluation will involve various retinal image datasets, including DRIVE, REVIEW, STARE, HRF, and DRION. The methodologies under consideration encompass machine learning, filtering-based, and model-based approaches, with performance assessment based on a range of metrics, including true positive rate (TPR), true negative rate (TNR), positive predictive value (PPV), negative predictive value (NPV), false discovery rate (FDR), Matthews's correlation coefficient (MCC), and accuracy (ACC). The primary objective of this research is to scrutinize, assess, and compare the design and performance of different segmentation and classification techniques, encompassing both supervised and unsupervised learning methods. To attain this objective, we will refine existing techniques and develop new ones, ensuring a more streamlined and computationally efficient approach.
Creating a crop type map is a dominant yet complicated model to produce. This study aims to determine the best model to identify the wheat crop in the Haridwar district, Uttarakhand, India, by presenting a novel approach using machine learning techniques for time series data derived from the Sentinel-2 satellite spanned from mid-November to April. The proposed methodology combines the Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI), satellite bands like red, green, blue, and NIR, feature extraction, and classification algorithms to capture crop growth's temporal dynamics effectively. Three models, Random Forest, Convolutional Neural Networks, and Support Vector Machine, were compared to obtain the start of season (SOS). It is validated and evaluated using the performance metrics. Further, Random Forest stood out as the best model statistically and spatially for phenology parameter extraction with the least RMSE value at 19 days. CNN and Random Forest models were used to classify wheat crops by combining SOS, blue, green, red, NIR bands, and NDVI. Random Forest produces a more accurate wheat map with an accuracy of 69% and 0.5 MeanIoU. It was observed that CNN is not able to distinguish between wheat and other crops. The result revealed that incorporating the Sentinel-2 satellite data bearing a high spatial and temporal resolution with supervised machine-learning models and crop phenology metrics can empower the crop type classification process.
Breast cancer was a prevalent form of cancer worldwide. Thermography, a method for diagnosing breast cancer, involves recording the thermal patterns of the breast. This article explores the use of a convolutional neural network (CNN) algorithm to extract features from a dataset of thermographic images. Initially, the CNN network was used to extract a feature vector from the images. Subsequently, machine learning techniques can be used for image classification. This study utilizes four classification methods, namely Fully connected neural network (FCnet), support vector machine (SVM), classification linear model (CLINEAR), and KNN, to classify breast cancer from thermographic images. The accuracy rates achieved by the FCnet, SVM, CLINEAR, and k-nearest neighbors (KNN) algorithms were 94.2%, 95.0%, 95.0%, and 94.1%, respectively. Furthermore, the reliability parameters for these classifiers were computed as 92.1%, 97.5%, 96.5%, and 91.2%, while their respective sensitivities were calculated as 95.5%, 94.1%, 90.4%, and 93.2%. These findings can assist experts in developing an expert system for breast cancer diagnosis.
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