Background: In recent years, melanoma is rising at a faster rate compared to other cancers. Although it is the most serious type of skin cancer, the diagnosis at early stages makes it curable. Dermoscopy is a reliable medical technique used to detect melanoma by using a dermoscope to examine the skin. In the last few decades, digital imaging devices have made great progress which allowed capturing and storing high-quality images from these examinations. The stored images are now being standardized and used for the automatic detection of melanoma. However, when the hair covers the skin, this makes the task challenging. Therefore, it is important to eliminate the hair to get accurate results.
Methods: In this paper, we propose a simple yet efficient method for hair removal using a variational autoencoder without the need for paired samples. The encoder takes as input a dermoscopy image and builds a latent distribution that ignores hair as it is considered noise, while the decoder reconstructs a hair-free image. Both encoder and decoder use a decent convolutional neural networks architecture that provides high performance. The construction of our model comprises two stages of training. In the first stage, the model has trained on hair-occluded images to output hair-free images, and in the second stage, it is optimized using hair-free images to preserve the image textures. Although the variational autoencoder produces hair-free images, it does not maintain the quality of the generated images. Thus, we explored the use of three-loss functions including the structural similarity index (SSIM), L1-norm, and L2-norm to improve the visual quality of the generated images.
Results: The evaluation of the hair-free reconstructed images is carried out using t-distributed stochastic neighbor embedding (SNE) feature mapping by visualizing the distribution of the real hair-free images and the synthesized hair-free images. The conducted experiments on the publicly available dataset HAM10000 show that our method is very efficient.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/srt.13145 | DOI Listing |
Skin Res Technol
May 2022
School of Computer Science and Engineering, Nanjing University of Science and Technology, Nanjing, China.
Background: In recent years, melanoma is rising at a faster rate compared to other cancers. Although it is the most serious type of skin cancer, the diagnosis at early stages makes it curable. Dermoscopy is a reliable medical technique used to detect melanoma by using a dermoscope to examine the skin.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFArtif Intell Med
August 2020
School of Medicine, Deakin University, Australia. Electronic address:
Automated skin lesion analysis is one of the trending fields that has gained attention among the dermatologists and health care practitioners. Skin lesion restoration is an essential pre-processing step for lesion enhancements for accurate automated analysis and diagnosis by both dermatologists and computer-aided diagnosis tools. Hair occlusion is one of the most popular artifacts in dermatoscopic images.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntroduction: Pubic hair grooming and removal are common behaviors among men and women. However, little is known about the reasons for grooming, preferred pubic hairstyle of sexual partners, and symptoms associated with regular grooming.
Aims: This study aims to assess pubic hair removal/grooming practices, pubic hairstyle preferences, and genital outcomes associated with pubic hair removal among men and women in a college sample.
Annu Int Conf IEEE Eng Med Biol Soc
June 2012
Univ Padova, Italy.
VirtualShave is a novel tool to remove hair from digital dermatoscopic images. First, individual hairs are identified using a top-hat filter followed by morphological postprocessing. Then, they are replaced through PDE-based inpainting with an estimate of the underlying occluded skin.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Plast Reconstr Aesthet Surg
November 2007
Canniesburn Plastic Surgery Unit, Glasgow Royal Infirmary, 84 Castle Street, Glasgow G4 0SF, UK.
The development of microsurgery has most recently been focused upon the evolution of perforator flaps, with the aim of minimising donor site morbidity, and avoiding the transfer of functionally unnecessary tissues. The vascular basis of perforator flaps also facilitates radical primary thinning prior to flap transfer, when appropriate. Based upon initial clinical observations, cadaveric, and radiological studies, we describe a new, thin, perforator flap based upon the circumflex scapular artery (CSA).
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