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Multiple surface segmentation using convolution neural nets: application to retinal layer segmentation in OCT images
Author(s) -
Abhay Shah,
Leixin Zhou,
Michael D. Abràmoff,
Xiaodong Wu
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
biomedical optics express
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.362
H-Index - 86
ISSN - 2156-7085
DOI - 10.1364/boe.9.004509
Subject(s) - segmentation , artificial intelligence , computer science , convolutional neural network , optical coherence tomography , pattern recognition (psychology) , computer vision , image segmentation , cut , deep learning , optics , physics
Automated segmentation of object boundaries or surfaces is crucial for quantitative image analysis in numerous biomedical applications. For example, retinal surfaces in optical coherence tomography (OCT) images play a vital role in the diagnosis and management of retinal diseases. Recently, graph based surface segmentation and contour modeling have been developed and optimized for various surface segmentation tasks. These methods require expertly designed, application specific transforms, including cost functions, constraints and model parameters. However, deep learning based methods are able to directly learn the model and features from training data. In this paper, we propose a convolutional neural network (CNN) based framework to segment multiple surfaces simultaneously. We demonstrate the application of the proposed method by training a single CNN to segment three retinal surfaces in two types of OCT images - normal retinas and retinas affected by intermediate age-related macular degeneration (AMD). The trained network directly infers the segmentations for each B-scan in one pass. The proposed method was validated on 50 retinal OCT volumes (3000 B-scans) including 25 normal and 25 intermediate AMD subjects. Our experiment demonstrated statistically significant improvement of segmentation accuracy compared to the optimal surface segmentation method with convex priors (OSCS) and two deep learning based UNET methods for both types of data. The average computation time for segmenting an entire OCT volume (consisting of 60 B-scans each) for the proposed method was 12.3 seconds, demonstrating low computation costs and higher performance compared to the graph based optimal surface segmentation and UNET based methods.

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