Ongoing improvements in AI, particularly concerning deep learning techniques, are assisting to identify, classify, and quantify patterns in clinical images. Deep learning is the quickest developing field in artificial intelligence and is effectively utilized lately in numerous areas, including medication. A brief outline is given on studies carried out on the region of application: neuro, brain, retinal, pneumonic, computerized pathology, bosom, heart, breast, bone, stomach, and musculoskeletal. For information exploration, knowledge deployment, and knowledge-based prediction, deep learning networks can be successfully applied to big data. In the field of medical image processing methods and analysis, fundamental information and state-of-the-art approaches with deep learning are presented in this paper. The primary goals of this paper are to present research on medical image processing as well as to define and implement the key guidelines that are identified and addressed.
The use of computer-assisted analysis to improve image interpretation has been a long-standing challenge in the medical imaging industry. In terms of image comprehension, Continuous advances in AI (Artificial Intelligence), predominantly in DL (Deep Learning) techniques, are supporting in the classification, Detection, and quantification of anomalies in medical images. DL techniques are the most rapidly evolving branch of AI, and it’s recently been successfully pragmatic in a variety of fields, including medicine. This paper provides a classification method for COVID 19 infected X-ray images based on new novel deep CNN model. For COVID19 specified pneumonia analysis, two new customized CNN architectures, CVD-HNet1 (COVID-HybridNetwork1) and CVD-HNet2 (COVID-HybridNetwork2), have been designed. The suggested method utilizes operations based on boundaries and regions, as well as convolution processes, in a systematic manner. In comparison to existing CNNs, the suggested classification method achieves excellent Accuracy 98 percent, F Score 0.99 and MCC 0.97. These results indicate impressive classification accuracy on a limited dataset, with more training examples, much better results can be achieved. Overall, our CVD-HNet model could be a useful tool for radiologists in diagnosing and detecting COVID 19 instances early.
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