Deep Convolutional Neural Network With a Multi-Scale Attention Feature Fusion Module for Segmentation of Multimodal Brain Tumor

As a non-invasive, low-cost medical imaging technology, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) has become an important tool for brain tumor diagnosis. Many scholars have carried out some related researches on MRI brain tumor segmentation based on deep convolutional neural networks, and have achieved good...

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Autores principales: Xueqin He, Wenjie Xu, Jane Yang, Jianyao Mao, Sifang Chen, Zhanxiang Wang
Formato: article
Lenguaje:EN
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2021
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Acceso en línea:https://doaj.org/article/8d2e0e3645d74b22ae74c975c9cedc4b
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Sumario:As a non-invasive, low-cost medical imaging technology, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) has become an important tool for brain tumor diagnosis. Many scholars have carried out some related researches on MRI brain tumor segmentation based on deep convolutional neural networks, and have achieved good performance. However, due to the large spatial and structural variability of brain tumors and low image contrast, the segmentation of MRI brain tumors is challenging. Deep convolutional neural networks often lead to the loss of low-level details as the network structure deepens, and they cannot effectively utilize the multi-scale feature information. Therefore, a deep convolutional neural network with a multi-scale attention feature fusion module (MAFF-ResUNet) is proposed to address them. The MAFF-ResUNet consists of a U-Net with residual connections and a MAFF module. The combination of residual connections and skip connections fully retain low-level detailed information and improve the global feature extraction capability of the encoding block. Besides, the MAFF module selectively extracts useful information from the multi-scale hybrid feature map based on the attention mechanism to optimize the features of each layer and makes full use of the complementary feature information of different scales. The experimental results on the BraTs 2019 MRI dataset show that the MAFF-ResUNet can learn the edge structure of brain tumors better and achieve high accuracy.