Automatic Lesion Boundary Segmentation in Dermoscopic Images with Ensemble Deep Learning Methods

Bibliographic Details
Title: Automatic Lesion Boundary Segmentation in Dermoscopic Images with Ensemble Deep Learning Methods
Authors: Goyal, Manu, Oakley, Amanda, Bansal, Priyanka, Dancey, Darren, Yap, Moi Hoon
Publication Year: 2019
Collection: Computer Science
Subject Terms: Electrical Engineering and Systems Science - Image and Video Processing, Computer Science - Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition
More Details: Early detection of skin cancer, particularly melanoma, is crucial to enable advanced treatment. Due to the rapid growth in the numbers of skin cancers, there is a growing need of computerized analysis for skin lesions. The state-of-the-art public available datasets for skin lesions are often accompanied with very limited amount of segmentation ground truth labeling as it is laborious and expensive. The lesion boundary segmentation is vital to locate the lesion accurately in dermoscopic images and lesion diagnosis of different skin lesion types. In this work, we propose the use of fully automated deep learning ensemble methods for accurate lesion boundary segmentation in dermoscopic images. We trained the Mask-RCNN and DeepLabv3+ methods on ISIC-2017 segmentation training set and evaluate the performance of the ensemble networks on ISIC-2017 testing set. Our results showed that the best proposed ensemble method segmented the skin lesions with Jaccard index of 79.58% for the ISIC-2017 testing set. The proposed ensemble method outperformed FrCN, FCN, U-Net, and SegNet in Jaccard Index by 2.48%, 7.42%, 17.95%, and 9.96% respectively. Furthermore, the proposed ensemble method achieved an accuracy of 95.6% for some representative clinically benign cases, 90.78% for the melanoma cases, and 91.29% for the seborrheic keratosis cases on ISIC-2017 testing set, exhibiting better performance than FrCN, FCN, U-Net, and SegNet.
Comment: 7 pages, 8 figures and 4 tables. arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:1711.10449
Document Type: Working Paper
Access URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/1902.00809
Accession Number: edsarx.1902.00809
Database: arXiv
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