2012
DOI: 10.1007/s10278-012-9451-0
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An Interactive System for Computer-Aided Diagnosis of Breast Masses

Abstract: Although mammography is the only clinically accepted imaging modality for screening the general population to detect breast cancer, interpreting mammograms is difficult with lower sensitivity and specificity. To provide radiologists "a visual aid" in interpreting mammograms, we developed and tested an interactive system for computeraided detection and diagnosis (CAD) of mass-like cancers. Using this system, an observer can view CAD-cued mass regions depicted on one image and then query any suspicious regions (… Show more

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Cited by 20 publications
(12 citation statements)
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“…The study has a number of unique characteristics and experimental observations. First, to realize a fast (or "real time") reference image retrieval and compute a classification score for a queried ROI in CAD or particularly in the interactive CAD application, 26 a set of image features is typically precomputed from all selected ROIs in the reference image database. In most of the previous studies, T III.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The study has a number of unique characteristics and experimental observations. First, to realize a fast (or "real time") reference image retrieval and compute a classification score for a queried ROI in CAD or particularly in the interactive CAD application, 26 a set of image features is typically precomputed from all selected ROIs in the reference image database. In most of the previous studies, T III.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Due to the large variation of breast lesions and 3D tissue overlap on the 2D projection based mammograms, fully automated computerized schemes often fail to accurately segment subtle lesions. 23,26 Thus, the errors and inconsistencies in the computed lesion morphological and density distribution features can negatively impact or reduce the performance of the CBIR based CAD schemes. To avoid the impact of lesion segmentation error, some researchers have tested other CBIR approaches without lesion segmentation [i.e., using mutual information of the entire ROI (Ref.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…On the other hand, many CBIR algorithms based on regional image features can avoid the lesion segmentation [14], but they require longer computation time. However, when the CBIR is used in an interactive CAD system [15], different users (e.g., radiologists) subjectively query the lesion center using a computer mouse, which results in the lesion center positon shift. The variation of the lesion center (or growth seed) for the CAD scheme to extract ROI or segment lesion region may result in retrieving different similar reference ROIs and thus generating different classification scores because CAD schemes can be highly sensitive to the small variation of pixel value distributions [16,17].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%