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Exploring uncertainty measures in convolutional neural network for semantic segmentation of oral cancer images
- Song, Bofan;
- Li, Shaobai;
- Sunny, Sumsum;
- Gurushanth, Keerthi;
- Mendonca, Pramila;
- Mukhia, Nirza;
- Patrick, Sanjana;
- Peterson, Tyler;
- Gurudath, Shubha;
- Raghavan, Subhashini;
- Tsusennaro, Imchen;
- Leivon, Shirley T;
- Kolur, Trupti;
- Shetty, Vivek;
- Bushan, Vidya;
- Ramesh, Rohan;
- Pillai, Vijay;
- Wilder-Smith, Petra;
- Suresh, Amritha;
- Kuriakose, Moni Abraham;
- Birur, Praveen;
- Liang, Rongguang
- et al.
Abstract
Significance
Oral cancer is one of the most prevalent cancers, especially in middle- and low-income countries such as India. Automatic segmentation of oral cancer images can improve the diagnostic workflow, which is a significant task in oral cancer image analysis. Despite the remarkable success of deep-learning networks in medical segmentation, they rarely provide uncertainty quantification for their output.Aim
We aim to estimate uncertainty in a deep-learning approach to semantic segmentation of oral cancer images and to improve the accuracy and reliability of predictions.Approach
This work introduced a UNet-based Bayesian deep-learning (BDL) model to segment potentially malignant and malignant lesion areas in the oral cavity. The model can quantify uncertainty in predictions. We also developed an efficient model that increased the inference speed, which is almost six times smaller and two times faster (inference speed) than the original UNet. The dataset in this study was collected using our customized screening platform and was annotated by oral oncology specialists.Results
The proposed approach achieved good segmentation performance as well as good uncertainty estimation performance. In the experiments, we observed an improvement in pixel accuracy and mean intersection over union by removing uncertain pixels. This result reflects that the model provided less accurate predictions in uncertain areas that may need more attention and further inspection. The experiments also showed that with some performance compromises, the efficient model reduced computation time and model size, which expands the potential for implementation on portable devices used in resource-limited settings.Conclusions
Our study demonstrates the UNet-based BDL model not only can perform potentially malignant and malignant oral lesion segmentation, but also can provide informative pixel-level uncertainty estimation. With this extra uncertainty information, the accuracy and reliability of the model’s prediction can be improved.Many UC-authored scholarly publications are freely available on this site because of the UC's open access policies. Let us know how this access is important for you.
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