Microscopic image-based analysis has been intensively performed for pathological studies and diagnosis of diseases. However, mis-authentication of cell lines due to misjudgments by pathologists has been recognized as a serious problem. To address this problem, we propose a deep-learning-based approach for the automatic taxonomy of cancer cell types. A total of 889 bright-field microscopic images of four cancer cell lines were acquired using a benchtop microscope. Individual cells were further segmented and augmented to increase the image dataset. Afterward, deep transfer learning was adopted to accelerate the classification of cancer types. Experiments revealed that the deep-learning-based methods outperformed traditional machine-learning-based methods. Moreover, the Wilcoxon signed-rank test showed that deep ensemble approaches outperformed individual deep-learning-based models (p < 0.001) and were in effect to achieve the classification accuracy up to 97.735%. Additional investigation with the Wilcoxon signed-rank test was conducted to consider various network design choices, such as the type of optimizer, type of learning rate scheduler, degree of fine-tuning, and use of data augmentation. Finally, it was found that the using data augmentation and updating all the weights of a network during fine-tuning improve the overall performance of individual convolutional neural network models.
The demand for wheelchairs has increased recently as the population of the elderly and patients with disorders increases. However, society still pays less attention to infrastructure that can threaten the wheelchair user, such as sidewalks with cracks/potholes. Although various studies have been proposed to recognize such challenges, they mainly depend on RGB images or IMU sensors, which are sensitive to outdoor conditions such as low illumination, bad weather, and unavoidable vibrations, resulting in unsatisfactory and unstable performance. In this paper, we introduce a novel system based on various convolutional neural networks (CNNs) to automatically classify the condition of sidewalks using images captured with depth and infrared modalities. Moreover, we compare the performance of training CNNs from scratch and the transfer learning approach, where the weights learned from the natural image domain (e.g., ImageNet) are fine-tuned to the depth and infrared image domain. In particular, we propose applying the ResNet-152 model pre-trained with self-supervised learning during transfer learning to leverage better image representations. Performance evaluation on the classification of the sidewalk condition was conducted with 100% and 10% of training data. The experimental results validate the effectiveness and feasibility of the proposed approach and bring future research directions.
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