4.6 Article

Automatic segmentation of optic disc in retinal fundus images using semi-supervised deep learning

Journal

MULTIMEDIA TOOLS AND APPLICATIONS
Volume 80, Issue 3, Pages 3443-3468

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11042-020-09778-6

Keywords

Deep learning; Autoencoder; Semi-supervised learning; Convolutional neural network; Transfer learning; Segmentation; Optic disc

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This article proposes a novel deep learning model to automatically segment the optic disc in retinal fundus images using semi-supervised learning and transfer learning concepts. Experimental results show that the proposed method performs on par with the state-of-the-art methods on the test set of the DRISHTI GS1 and RIM-ONE datasets.
Diseases of the eye require manual segmentation and examination of the optic disc by ophthalmologists. Though, image segmentation using deep learning techniques is achieving remarkable results, it leverages on large-scale labeled datasets. But, in the field of medical imaging, it is challenging to acquire large labeled datasets. Hence, this article proposes a novel deep learning model to automatically segment the optic disc in retinal fundus images by using the concepts of semi-supervised learning and transfer learning. Initially, a convolutional autoencoder (CAE) is trained to automatically learn features from a large number of unlabeled fundus images available from the Kaggle's diabetic retinopathy (DR) dataset. The autoencoder (AE) learns the features from the unlabeled images by reconstructing the input images and becomes a pre-trained network (model). After this, the pre-trained autoencoder network is converted into a segmentation network. Later, using transfer learning, the segmentation network is trained with retinal fundus images along with their corresponding optic disc ground truth images from the DRISHTI GS1 and RIM-ONE datasets. The trained segmentation network is then tested on retinal fundus images from the test set of DRISHTI GS1 and RIM-ONE datasets. The experimental results show that the proposed method performs on par with the state-of-the-art methods achieving a 0.967 and 0.902 dice score coefficient on the test set of the DRISHTI GS1 and RIM-ONE datasets respectively. The proposed method also shows that transfer learning and semi-supervised learning overcomes the barrier imposed by the large labeled dataset. The proposed segmentation model can be used in automatic retinal image processing systems for diagnosing diseases of the eye.

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