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Ana Garcia Rodriguez; Yael Tudela; Henry Cordova; S. Carballal; I. Ordas; L. Moreira; E. Vaquero; O. Ortiz; L. Rivero; F. Javier Sanchez; Miriam Cuatrecasas; Maria Pellise; Jorge Bernal; Gloria Fernandez Esparrach |
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In vivo computer-aided diagnosis of colorectal polyps using white light endoscopy |
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Journal Article |
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2022 |
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Endoscopy International Open |
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ENDIO |
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10 |
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9 |
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E1201-E1207 |
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Background and study aims Artificial intelligence is currently able to accurately predict the histology of colorectal polyps. However, systems developed to date use complex optical technologies and have not been tested in vivo. The objective of this study was to evaluate the efficacy of a new deep learning-based optical diagnosis system, ATENEA, in a real clinical setting using only high-definition white light endoscopy (WLE) and to compare its performance with endoscopists. Methods ATENEA was prospectively tested in real life on consecutive polyps detected in colorectal cancer screening colonoscopies at Hospital Clínic. No images were discarded, and only WLE was used. The in vivo ATENEA's prediction (adenoma vs non-adenoma) was compared with the prediction of four staff endoscopists without specific training in optical diagnosis for the study purposes. Endoscopists were blind to the ATENEA output. Histology was the gold standard. Results Ninety polyps (median size: 5 mm, range: 2-25) from 31 patients were included of which 69 (76.7 %) were adenomas. ATENEA correctly predicted the histology in 63 of 69 (91.3 %, 95 % CI: 82 %-97 %) adenomas and 12 of 21 (57.1 %, 95 % CI: 34 %-78 %) non-adenomas while endoscopists made correct predictions in 52 of 69 (75.4 %, 95 % CI: 60 %-85 %) and 20 of 21 (95.2 %, 95 % CI: 76 %-100 %), respectively. The global accuracy was 83.3 % (95 % CI: 74%-90 %) and 80 % (95 % CI: 70 %-88 %) for ATENEA and endoscopists, respectively. Conclusion ATENEA can accurately be used for in vivo characterization of colorectal polyps, enabling the endoscopist to make direct decisions. ATENEA showed a global accuracy similar to that of endoscopists despite an unsatisfactory performance for non-adenomatous lesions. |
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2022 Sep 14 |
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PMID |
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ISE; 600.157 |
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Admin @ si @ GTC2022b |
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3752 |
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Parichehr Behjati Ardakani; Pau Rodriguez; Carles Fernandez; Armin Mehri; Xavier Roca; Seiichi Ozawa; Jordi Gonzalez |
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Title |
Frequency-based Enhancement Network for Efficient Super-Resolution |
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Journal Article |
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2022 |
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IEEE Access |
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ACCESS |
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10 |
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57383-57397 |
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Deep learning; Frequency-based methods; Lightweight architectures; Single image super-resolution |
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Recently, deep convolutional neural networks (CNNs) have provided outstanding performance in single image super-resolution (SISR). Despite their remarkable performance, the lack of high-frequency information in the recovered images remains a core problem. Moreover, as the networks increase in depth and width, deep CNN-based SR methods are faced with the challenge of computational complexity in practice. A promising and under-explored solution is to adapt the amount of compute based on the different frequency bands of the input. To this end, we present a novel Frequency-based Enhancement Block (FEB) which explicitly enhances the information of high frequencies while forwarding low-frequencies to the output. In particular, this block efficiently decomposes features into low- and high-frequency and assigns more computation to high-frequency ones. Thus, it can help the network generate more discriminative representations by explicitly recovering finer details. Our FEB design is simple and generic and can be used as a direct replacement of commonly used SR blocks with no need to change network architectures. We experimentally show that when replacing SR blocks with FEB we consistently improve the reconstruction error, while reducing the number of parameters in the model. Moreover, we propose a lightweight SR model — Frequency-based Enhancement Network (FENet) — based on FEB that matches the performance of larger models. Extensive experiments demonstrate that our proposal performs favorably against the state-of-the-art SR algorithms in terms of visual quality, memory footprint, and inference time. The code is available at https://github.com/pbehjatii/FENet |
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18 May 2022 |
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IEEE |
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Admin @ si @ BRF2022a |
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3747 |
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Maria Vanrell; Jordi Vitria; Xavier Roca |
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A multidimensional scaling approach to explore the behavior of a texture perception algorithm. |
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1997 |
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Machine Vision and Applications |
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9 |
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262–271 |
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BCNPCL @ bcnpcl @ VVR1997 |
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35 |
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A. Pujol; Juan J. Villanueva |
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A supervised Modification of the Hausdorff distance for visual shape classification |
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2002 |
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International Journal of Pattern Recognition and Artificial Intelligence |
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16 |
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3 |
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349-359 |
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(IF: 0.359) |
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Daniel Ponsa; Robert Benavente; Felipe Lumbreras; Judit Martinez; Xavier Roca |
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Quality control of safety belts by machine vision inspection for real-time production |
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2003 |
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Optical Engineering (IF: 0.877) |
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42 |
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4 |
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1114-1120 |
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ADAS @ adas @ PRL2003 |
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399 |
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