Liver lesion segmentation

Citation Author(s):
Liang
Zhao
Submitted by:
Liang Zhao
Last updated:
Thu, 03/14/2024 - 00:20
DOI:
10.21227/6ec4-0m16
License:
0
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Abstract 

 

Early diagnosis plays a pivotal role in handling the global health challenge posed by liver diseases. However, early-stage lesions are typically quite small, presenting significant difficulties due to insufficient regions for developing effective features, indistinguishable boundaries of small lesions, and a lack of tiny liver lesion masks. To address these issues, we approach the solution in two-fold: an efficient model and a high-quality dataset. The model is built upon the advantages of path signature and camouflaged object detection. The path signature narrows down the ambiguous boundaries between lesions and other tissues while the camouflaged object detection achieves high accuracy in detecting inconspicuous lesions. The two are seamlessly integrated to ensure high accuracy and fidelity. For the dataset, we collect more than ten thousand liver images with over four thousand lesions, approximately half of which are small. Experiments on both an established dataset and our newly constructed one show that the proposed model outperforms state-of-the-art semantic segmentation and camouflaged object detection models, particularly in detecting small lesions. Moreover, the decisive and faithful salience maps generated by the model at the boundary regions demonstrate its strong robustness. 

Instructions: 

There have 87 folds containing livers and lesion masks with the name "case-xxx", where "xxx" represents the case number. Each folder has two subfolders, one for the original liver images and the other for lesion masks. The original images in ".png" format, and the masks are in ".png" format, too.