Random Fourier Features-Based Deep Learning Improvement with Class Activation Interpretability for Nerve Structure Segmentation

Peripheral nerve blocking (PNB) is a standard procedure to support regional anesthesia. Still, correct localization of the nerve’s structure is needed to avoid adverse effects; thereby, ultrasound images are used as an aid approach. In addition, image-based automatic nerve segmentation from deep lea...

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Autores principales: Cristian Alfonso Jimenez-Castaño, Andrés Marino Álvarez-Meza, Oscar David Aguirre-Ospina, David Augusto Cárdenas-Peña, Álvaro Angel Orozco-Gutiérrez
Formato: article
Lenguaje:EN
Publicado: MDPI AG 2021
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Acceso en línea:https://doaj.org/article/6a121e7284ca48b89d1884eee2c25d78
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Sumario:Peripheral nerve blocking (PNB) is a standard procedure to support regional anesthesia. Still, correct localization of the nerve’s structure is needed to avoid adverse effects; thereby, ultrasound images are used as an aid approach. In addition, image-based automatic nerve segmentation from deep learning methods has been proposed to mitigate attenuation and speckle noise ultrasonography issues. Notwithstanding, complex architectures highlight the region of interest lacking suitable data interpretability concerning the learned features from raw instances. Here, a kernel-based deep learning enhancement is introduced for nerve structure segmentation. In a nutshell, a random Fourier features-based approach was utilized to complement three well-known semantic segmentation architectures, e.g., fully convolutional network, U-net, and ResUnet. Moreover, two ultrasound image datasets for PNB were tested. Obtained results show that our kernel-based approach provides a better generalization capability from image segmentation-based assessments on different nerve structures. Further, for data interpretability, a semantic segmentation extension of the GradCam++ for class-activation mapping was used to reveal relevant learned features separating between nerve and background. Thus, our proposal favors both straightforward (shallow) and complex architectures (deeper neural networks).