Classification of Benign and Malignant Lung Nodules Based on Deep Convolutional Network Feature Extraction

With the rapid development of detection technology, CT imaging technology has been widely used in the early clinical diagnosis of lung nodules. However, accurate assessment of the nature of the nodule remains a challenging task due to the subjective nature of the radiologist. With the increasing amo...

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Autores principales: Enhui Lv, Wenfeng Liu, Pengbo Wen, Xingxing Kang
Formato: article
Lenguaje:EN
Publicado: Hindawi Limited 2021
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Acceso en línea:https://doaj.org/article/30f68bc4d4f742dc9ea359c207e69527
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Sumario:With the rapid development of detection technology, CT imaging technology has been widely used in the early clinical diagnosis of lung nodules. However, accurate assessment of the nature of the nodule remains a challenging task due to the subjective nature of the radiologist. With the increasing amount of publicly available lung image data, it has become possible to use convolutional neural networks for benign and malignant classification of lung nodules. However, as the network depth increases, network training methods based on gradient descent usually lead to gradient dispersion. Therefore, we propose a novel deep convolutional network approach to classify the benignity and malignancy of lung nodules. Firstly, we segmented, extracted, and performed zero-phase component analysis whitening on images of lung nodules. Then, a multilayer perceptron was introduced into the structure to construct a deep convolutional network. Finally, the minibatch stochastic gradient descent method with a momentum coefficient is used to fine-tune the deep convolutional network to avoid the gradient dispersion. The 750 lung nodules in the lung image database are used for experimental verification. Classification accuracy of the proposed method can reach 96.0%. The experimental results show that the proposed method can provide an objective and efficient aid to solve the problem of classifying benign and malignant lung nodules in medical images.