Abstract
The National Cancer Institute has collected a large database of uterine cervix images termed "cervigrams", for cervical cancer screening research. Tissues of interest within the cervigram, in particular the lesions, are of varying sizes and of complexnon-convex shapes. The tissues possess similar color features and their boundaries are not always clear. The main objective of the current work is to provide a segmentation framework for tissues of interest within the cervix, that can cope with these difficulties in an unsupervised manner and with a minimal number of parameters. The proposed framework transitions from pixels to a set of small coherent regions (superpixels), which are grouped bottom-up into larger, non-convex, perceptually similar regions. The merging process is performed utilizing a new graph-cut criterion termed the normalized-mean cut (NMCut) and an agglomerative clustering framework. Superpixels similarity is computed via a locally scaled similarity measure that combines region and edge information. Segmentation quality is evaluated by measuring the overlap accuracy of the generated segments and tissues that were manually marked by medical experts. Experiments are conducted on two sets of cervigrams and lead to the following set of observations and conclusions: 1) The generated superpixels provide an accurate decomposition of the different tissues; 2) The local scaling process improves the clustering results; 3) The influence of different graph-cut criterions on the segmentation accuracy is evaluated and the NMCut criterion is shown to provide the best results; 4) A comparison between several modifications to the agglomerative clustering process is conducted. The results are shown to be strongly influenced by the merging procedure; 5) The agglomerative clustering framework is shown to outperform a state-of-the-art spectral clustering algorithm.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 1682-1701 |
Number of pages | 20 |
Journal | Image and Vision Computing |
Volume | 28 |
Issue number | 12 |
DOIs | |
State | Published - 1 Jan 2010 |
Externally published | Yes |
Keywords
- Cervical cancer
- Cervicography images
- Graph cuts
- Image segmentation
- Medical image analysis
ASJC Scopus subject areas
- Signal Processing
- Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition