AI Article Synopsis

  • Early detection of oral cancer is crucial for high-risk patients, but current datasets are unbalanced, negatively impacting machine learning classification.
  • The study aimed to address data imbalance by using various techniques, including weight balancing and data augmentation, on a dataset of 3,851 images of cheek mucosa.
  • Results showed improved classification performance for minority classes and increased accuracy for the "premalignancy" class, highlighting effective methods to reduce class bias in oral cancer screening.

Article Abstract

Significance: Early detection of oral cancer is vital for high-risk patients, and machine learning-based automatic classification is ideal for disease screening. However, current datasets collected from high-risk populations are unbalanced and often have detrimental effects on the performance of classification.

Aim: To reduce the class bias caused by data imbalance.

Approach: We collected 3851 polarized white light cheek mucosa images using our customized oral cancer screening device. We use weight balancing, data augmentation, undersampling, focal loss, and ensemble methods to improve the neural network performance of oral cancer image classification with the imbalanced multi-class datasets captured from high-risk populations during oral cancer screening in low-resource settings.

Results: By applying both data-level and algorithm-level approaches to the deep learning training process, the performance of the minority classes, which were difficult to distinguish at the beginning, has been improved. The accuracy of "premalignancy" class is also increased, which is ideal for screening applications.

Conclusions: Experimental results show that the class bias induced by imbalanced oral cancer image datasets could be reduced using both data- and algorithm-level methods. Our study may provide an important basis for helping understand the influence of unbalanced datasets on oral cancer deep learning classifiers and how to mitigate.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8536945PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1117/1.JBO.26.10.105001DOI Listing

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