Advances in camera technologies and reduced equipment costs have lead to an increased interest in the application of thermography in the medical fields. Thermography is of particular interest for detection of breast cancer as it has been shown that it is capable of detecting the cancer earlier and is also allows diagnosis of fatty breast tissue. In this paper we perform breast cancer detection based on thermography, using a series of statistical features extracted from the thermograms coupled with a fuzzy rule-based classification system for diagnosis. The features stem from a comparison of left and right breast areas and quantify the bilateral differences encountered. Following this asymmetry analysis the features are fed to a fuzzy classification system. This classifier is used to extract fuzzy if-then rules based on a training set of known cases. Experimental results on a set of nearly 150 cases show the proposed system to work well accurately classifying about 80% of cases, a performance that is comparable to other imaging modalities such as mammography.
We evaluate the performance of cost-sensitive fuzzy-rule-based systems for pattern classification problems. We assume that a misclassification cost is given a priori for each training pattern. The task of classification thus becomes to minimize both classification error and misclassification cost. We examine the performance of two types of fuzzy classification based on fuzzy if-then rules generated from training patterns. The difference is whether or not they consider misclassification costs in rule generation. In our computational experiments, we use several specifications of misclassification cost to evaluate the performance of the two classifiers. Experimental results show that both classification error and misclassification cost are reduced by considering the misclassification cost in fuzzy rule generation.
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