Electrical impedance spectroscopy is a minimally invasive technique that has clear advantages for living tissue characterisation owing to its low cost and ease of use. The present paper describes how this technique can be applied to breast tissue classification and breast cancer detection. Statistical analysis is used to derive a set of rules based on features extracted from the graphical representation of electrical impedance spectra. These rules are used hierarchically to discriminate several classes of breast tissue. Results of statistical classification obtained from a data set of 106 cases representing six classes of excised breast tissue show an overall classification efficiency of approximately 92% with carcinoma discrimination > 86%.
Visual inspection of foetal heart rate (FHR) sequences is an important means of foetal well-being evaluation. The application of fractal features for classifying physiologically relevant FHR sequence patterns is reported. The use of fractal features is motivated by the difficulties exhibited by traditional classification schemes to discriminate some classes of FHR sequence and by the recognition that this type of signal exhibits features on different scales of observation, just as fractal signals do. To characterise the signals by fractal features, two approaches are taken. The first modes the FHR sequences as temporal fractals. The second uses techniques from the chaos-theory field and aims to model the attractor based on FHR sequences. The fractal features determined by both approaches are used to design a Bayesian classification scheme. Classification results for three classes are presented; they are quite satisfactory and illustrate the importance of this type of methodology.
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