4.5 Article

COVID-19 detection and disease progression visualization: Deep learning on chest X-rays for classification and coarse localization

Journal

APPLIED INTELLIGENCE
Volume 51, Issue 2, Pages 1010-1021

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10489-020-01867-1

Keywords

Activation maps; COVID-19; Deep neural networks; Transfer learning

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The study utilized transfer learning to classify and detect COVID-19 chest X-ray images with an accuracy of up to 96.8%. Additionally, a generative adversarial network was used to generate and enhance the COVID-19 class, while a gradient class activation mapping technique was implemented for result interpretation.
Chest X-rays are playing an important role in the testing and diagnosis of COVID-19 disease in the recent pandemic. However, due to the limited amount of labelled medical images, automated classification of these images for positive and negative cases remains the biggest challenge in their reliable use in diagnosis and disease progression. We implemented a transfer learning pipeline for classifying COVID-19 chest X-ray images from two publicly available chest X-ray datasets(1,2). The classifier effectively distinguishes inflammation in lungs due to COVID-19 and Pneumonia from the ones with no infection (normal). We have used multiple pre-trained convolutional backbones as the feature extractor and achieved an overall detection accuracy of 90%, 94.3%, and 96.8% for the VGG16, ResNet50, and EfficientNetB0 backbones respectively. Additionally, we trained a generative adversarial framework (a CycleGAN) to generate and augment the minority COVID-19 class in our approach. For visual explanations and interpretation purposes, we implemented a gradient class activation mapping technique to highlight the regions of the input image that are important for predictions. Additionally, these visualizations can be used to monitor the affected lung regions during disease progression and severity stages.

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