2007
DOI: 10.1117/12.711528
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A preliminary study of content-based mammographic masses retrieval

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Cited by 31 publications
(23 citation statements)
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“…However, the relatively low performance of CAD schemes in mass detection [12], make them less accepted as mass diagnosis tools. As an alternative, the interactive CAD systems, based on content-based information retrieval schemes [13,14,15], identify visually similar mass lesions that eventually are clinically relevant to the actual lesion [16]. Actually, CBIR-based CAD schemes have a potential to provide radiologist with visual aid and increase their confidence in accepting CAD-cued results in the decision making process.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…However, the relatively low performance of CAD schemes in mass detection [12], make them less accepted as mass diagnosis tools. As an alternative, the interactive CAD systems, based on content-based information retrieval schemes [13,14,15], identify visually similar mass lesions that eventually are clinically relevant to the actual lesion [16]. Actually, CBIR-based CAD schemes have a potential to provide radiologist with visual aid and increase their confidence in accepting CAD-cued results in the decision making process.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…These libraries have been used to train and validate computeraided diagnosis (CAD) systems in a variety of medical domains, including breast cancer. However, the value of CAD in clinical practice is controversial, due to their "blackbox" nature and lack of reasoning ability [7], [8], [9], [10], [11], despite significant recent progress [12], [13], [14], [15], [16], [17], [18], [19], [20] both in automated detection and characterization of breast masses. An alternative approach, espoused by efforts such as ISADS [2], eschews automated diagnosis in favor of providing medical professionals with additional context about the current case that could enable them to make a more informed decision.…”
Section: Related Workmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We evaluate the proposed algorithm in the context of ISADS using two metrics. The first metric, classification accuracy, indicates the extent to which malignant images can be detected based on the images that are retrieved by the system [18], [19]. We compute classification accuracy by the K Nearest Neighbor (KNN) classifier: Given a test example x, we first identify the K training examples that have the shortest distance to x, where distance is computed using the metric learned from training examples; we then compute the probability that x is malignant based on the percentage of its K nearest neighbors that belong to the malignant class.…”
Section: Experiments Setupmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Let be the feature vector of the candidate image and be the feature vector of the incomplete query image. Euclidean distance between the candidate image feature vector and the query image feature vector is given by [17]. The result of the distance calculation is used for retrieving images similar to incomplete query image.…”
Section: Distance Calculationmentioning
confidence: 99%