Deakin University
Browse
kouzani-automatedidentification-2008.pdf (520.21 kB)

Automated identification of lung nodules

Download (520.21 kB)
conference contribution
posted on 2008-01-01, 00:00 authored by S Lee, Abbas KouzaniAbbas Kouzani, Eric Hu
A system that can automatically detect nodules within lung images may assist expert radiologists in interpreting the abnormal patterns as nodules in 2D CT lung images. A system is presented that can automatically identify nodules of various sizes within lung images. The pattern classification method is employed to develop the proposed system. A random forest ensemble classifier is formed consisting of many weak learners that can grow decision trees. The forest selects the decision that has the most votes. The developed system consists of two random forest classifiers connected in a series fashion. A subset of CT lung images from the LIDC database is employed. It consists of 5721 images to train and test the system. There are 411 images that contained expert- radiologists identified nodules. Training sets consisting of nodule, non-nodule, and false-detection patterns are constructed. A collection of test images are also built. The first classifier is developed to detect all nodules. The second classifier is developed to eliminate the false detections produced by the first classifier. According to the experimental results, a true positive rate of 100%, and false positive rate of 1.4 per lung image are achieved.

History

Event

IEEE International Workshop on Multimedia Signal Processing (10th : 2008 : Cairns, Qld.)

Pagination

497 - 502

Publisher

IEEE

Location

Cairns, Qld.

Place of publication

Piscataway, N.J.

Start date

2008-10-08

End date

2008-10-10

ISBN-13

9781424422951

Language

eng

Publication classification

E1 Full written paper - refereed

Copyright notice

2008, IEEE

Editor/Contributor(s)

D Feng, T Sikora, W Siu, J Zhang, L Guan, J Dugelay, Q Wu, W Li

Title of proceedings

MMSP 2008 : Proceedings of IEEE 10th International Workshop on Multimedia Signal Processing

Usage metrics

    Research Publications

    Categories

    No categories selected

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC