AI Article Synopsis

  • COVID-19 has led to a surge in deaths, creating a need for early diagnosis methods, particularly through chest X-ray analysis.
  • This study introduces deep learning algorithms to classify chest X-rays into categories: COVID illness, healthy patients, and pneumonia, utilizing public datasets.
  • The proposed RESCOVIDTCNNet model achieved 99.5% accuracy in classifying images, making it a valuable tool for rapid diagnoses in areas lacking radiologists.

Article Abstract

Since the advent of COVID-19, the number of deaths has increased exponentially, boosting the requirement for various research studies that may correctly diagnose the illness at an early stage. Using chest X-rays, this study presents deep learning-based algorithms for classifying patients with COVID illness, healthy controls, and pneumonia classes. Data gathering, pre-processing, feature extraction, and classification are the four primary aspects of the approach. The pictures of chest X-rays utilized in this investigation came from various publicly available databases. The pictures were filtered to increase image quality in the pre-processing stage, and the chest X-ray images were de-noised using the empirical wavelet transform (EWT). Following that, four deep learning models were used to extract features. The first two models, Inception-V3 and Resnet-50, are based on transfer learning models. The Resnet-50 is combined with a temporal convolutional neural network (TCN) to create the third model. The fourth model is our suggested RESCOVIDTCNNet model, which integrates EWT, Resnet-50, and TCN. Finally, an artificial neural network (ANN) and a support vector machine were used to classify the data (SVM). Using five-fold cross-validation for 3-class classification, our suggested RESCOVIDTCNNet achieved a 99.5 percent accuracy. Our prototype can be utilized in developing nations where radiologists are in low supply to acquire a diagnosis quickly.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9045872PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.eswa.2022.117410DOI Listing

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