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DRINet for Medical Image Segmentation

  • Liang Chen
  • , Paul Bentley
  • , Kensaku Mori
  • , Kazunari Misawa
  • , Michitaka Fujiwara
  • , Daniel Rueckert
  • Imperial College London
  • Nagoya University
  • Aichi Cancer Center Hospital and Research Institute
  • Nagoya University Hospital

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

335 Scopus citations

Abstract

Convolutional neural networks (CNNs) have revolutionized medical image analysis over the past few years. The U-Net architecture is one of the most well-known CNN architectures for semantic segmentation and has achieved remarkable successes in many different medical image segmentation applications. The U-Net architecture consists of standard convolution layers, pooling layers, and upsampling layers. These convolution layers learn representative features of input images and construct segmentations based on the features. However, the features learned by standard convolution layers are not distinctive when the differences among different categories are subtle in terms of intensity, location, shape, and size. In this paper, we propose a novel CNN architecture, called Dense-Res-Inception Net (DRINet), which addresses this challenging problem. The proposed DRINet consists of three blocks, namely a convolutional block with dense connections, a deconvolutional block with residual inception modules, and an unpooling block. Our proposed architecture outperforms the U-Net in three different challenging applications, namely multi-class segmentation of cerebrospinal fluid on brain CT images, multi-organ segmentation on abdominal CT images, and multi-class brain tumor segmentation on MR images.

Original languageEnglish
Article number8357580
Pages (from-to)2453-2462
Number of pages10
JournalIEEE Transactions on Medical Imaging
Volume37
Issue number11
DOIs
StatePublished - Nov 2018
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Convolutional neural network
  • abdominal organ segmentation
  • brain atrophy
  • medical image segmentation

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