Abstract
Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is a massive public health problem worldwide. Accurate and fast automatic brain hematoma segmentation is important for TBI diagnosis, treatment and outcome prediction. In this study, we developed a fully automated system to detect and segment hematoma regions in head Computed Tomography (CT) images of patients with acute TBI. We first over-segmented brain images into superpixels and then extracted statistical and textural features to capture characteristics of superpixels. To overcome the shortage of annotated data, an uncertainty-based active learning strategy was designed to adaptively and iteratively select the most informative unlabeled data to be annotated for training a Support Vector Machine classifier (SVM). Finally, the coarse segmentation from the SVM classifier was incorporated into an active contour model to improve the accuracy of the segmentation. From our experiments, the proposed active learning strategy can achieve a comparable result with 5 times fewer labeled data compared with regular machine learning. Our proposed automatic hematoma segmentation system achieved an average Dice coefficient of 0.60 on our dataset, where patients are from multiple health centers and at multiple levels of injury. Our results show that the proposed method can effectively overcome the challenge of limited and highly varied dataset.
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The work is supported by National Science Foundation under Grant No. 1500124.
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Yao, H., Williamson, C., Gryak, J., Najarian, K. (2019). Brain Hematoma Segmentation Using Active Learning and an Active Contour Model. In: Rojas, I., Valenzuela, O., Rojas, F., Ortuño, F. (eds) Bioinformatics and Biomedical Engineering. IWBBIO 2019. Lecture Notes in Computer Science(), vol 11466. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-17935-9_35
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