Simple and Accurate Border Detection Algorithm for Melanoma Computer Aided Diagnosis.

Diagnostics (Basel)

DEI-Department of Electrics and Information Engineering, Politecnico di Bari, 70125 Bari, Italy.

Published: June 2020

AI Article Synopsis

  • The scientific community's interest in computer-aided skin lesion analysis has grown due to the increasing rates of melanoma, emphasizing the need for early detection to improve survival rates.
  • Accurate diagnosis of skin lesions is challenging and relies heavily on a physician's experience, making the development of computer methods for lesion detail extraction crucial in assisting dermatologists.
  • This paper presents an automatic segmentation method for pigmented skin lesions from dermoscopic images, demonstrating high effectiveness even with irregular boundaries and noise, validated through quantitative evaluation on a public dataset.

Article Abstract

The interest of the scientific community for computer aided skin lesion analysis and characterization has been increased during the last years for the growing incidence of melanoma among cancerous pathologies. The detection of melanoma in its early stage is essential for prognosis improvement and for guaranteeing a high five-year relative survival rate of patients. The clinical diagnosis of skin lesions is challenging and not trivial since it depends on human vision and physician experience and expertise. Therefore, a computer method that makes an accurate extraction of important details of skin lesion image can assist dermatologists in cancer detection. In particular, the border detection is a critical computer vision issue owing to the wide range of lesion shapes, sizes, colours and skin texture types. In this paper, an automatic and effective pigmented skin lesion segmentation method in dermoscopic image is presented. The proposed procedure is adopted to extract a mask of the lesion region without the adoption of other signal processing procedures for image improvement. A quantitative experimental evaluation has been performed on a publicly available database. The achieved results show the method validity and its high robustness towards irregular boundaries, smooth transition between lesion and skin, noise and artifact presence.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7344408PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/diagnostics10060423DOI Listing

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