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Area Determination of Diabetic Foot Ulcer Images Using a Cascaded Two-Stage SVM-Based Classification
Author(s) -
Lei Wang,
Peder C. Pedersen,
Emmanuel Agu,
Diane M. Strong,
Bengisu Tulu
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
ieee transactions on biomedical engineering
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.148
H-Index - 200
eISSN - 1558-2531
pISSN - 0018-9294
DOI - 10.1109/tbme.2016.2632522
Subject(s) - bioengineering , computing and processing , components, circuits, devices and systems , communication, networking and broadcast technologies
The standard chronic wound assessment method based on visual examination is potentially inaccurate and also represents a significant clinical workload. Hence, computer-based systems providing quantitative wound assessment may be valuable for accurately monitoring wound healing status, with the wound area the best suited for automated analysis. Here, we present a novel approach, using support vector machines (SVM) to determine the wound boundaries on foot ulcer images captured with an image capture box, which provides controlled lighting and range. After superpixel segmentation, a cascaded two-stage classifier operates as follows: in the first stage, a set of k binary SVM classifiers are trained and applied to different subsets of the entire training images dataset, and incorrectly classified instances are collected. In the second stage, another binary SVM classifier is trained on the incorrectly classified set. We extracted various color and texture descriptors from superpixels that are used as input for each stage in the classifier training. Specifically, color and bag-of-word representations of local dense scale invariant feature transformation features are descriptors for ruling out irrelevant regions, and color and wavelet-based features are descriptors for distinguishing healthy tissue from wound regions. Finally, the detected wound boundary is refined by applying the conditional random field method. We have implemented the wound classification on a Nexus 5 smartphone platform, except for training which was done offline. Results are compared with other classifiers and show that our approach provides high global performance rates (average sensitivity = 73.3%, specificity = 94.6%) and is sufficiently efficient for a smartphone-based image analysis.

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