Objective: This study aims to develop automatic breast tumor detection and classification including automatic tumor volume estimation using deep learning techniques based on computerized analysis of breast ultrasound images. When the skill levels of the radiologists and image quality are important to detect and diagnose the tumor using handheld ultrasound, the ability of this approach tends to assist the radiologist's decision for breast cancer diagnosis. Material and Methods: Breast ultrasound images were provided by the
Chest radiography (CXR) image is usually required for lung severity assessment. However, chest X-rays in COVID-19 interpretation is required expert radiologists’ knowledge. This study aims to improve the COVID-19 X-ray image classification using feature selection technique by the regression mutual information deep convolution neuron networks (RMI Deep-CNNs). The dataset consists of 219 COVID-19, 500 viral pneumonias, and 500 normal chest X-ray images. CXR images were comprehensively pre-trained using DCNNs to extract the very large image features, then, the feature selection could reduce the complexity of a model and reduce the model overfitting. Therefore, the critical features were selected using regression mutual information followed by the fully connected with softmax layer for classification. For the classification of two alternative systems, these networks were compared (ResNet152V2 and InceptionV3). The classification performance for both schemes were 92.21%, 100%, 90% and 91.39%, 100%, 82.50%, respectively. In addition, RMI Deep-CNNs not only improve the accuracy but also reduce trainable features by over 80%. This approach tends to significantly improve the computation time and model accuracy for COVID‐19 classification.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.