Diagnosis of ophthalmologic diseases in canines based on images using neural networks for image segmentation.

Heliyon

Faculty of Informatics and Digital Technologies, University of Rijeka, Centre for Artificial Intelligence University of Rijeka Ul, Radmile Matejcic 2, 51000, Rijeka, Croatia.

Published: October 2024

The primary challenge in diagnosing ocular diseases in canines based on images lies in developing an accurate and reliable machine learning method capable of effectively segmenting and diagnosing these conditions through image analysis. Addressing this challenge, the study focuses on developing and rigorously evaluating a machine learning model for diagnosing ocular diseases in canines, employing the U-Net neural network architecture as a foundational element of this investigation. Through this extensive evaluation, the authors identified a model that exhibited good reliability, achieving prediction scores with an Intersection over Union (IoU) exceeding 80 %, as measured by the Jaccard index. The research methodology encompassed a systematic exploration of various neural network backbones (VGG, ResNet, Inception, EfficientNet) and the U-Net model, combined with an extensive model selection process and an in-depth analysis of a custom training dataset consisting of historical images of different medical symptoms and diseases in dog eyes. The results indicate a fairly high degree of accuracy in the segmentation and diagnosis of ocular diseases in canines, demonstrating the model's effectiveness in real-world applications. In conclusion, this potentially makes a significant contribution to the field by utilizing advanced machine-learning techniques to develop image-based diagnostic routines in veterinary ophthalmology. This model's successful development and validation offer a promising new tool for veterinarians and pet owners, enhancing early disease detection and improving health outcomes for canine patients.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11467576PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.heliyon.2024.e38287DOI Listing

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