4.6 Article

A New Deep-Learning-Based Model for Breast Cancer Diagnosis from Medical Images

Journal

DIAGNOSTICS
Volume 13, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/diagnostics13111944

Keywords

medical image; breast cancer diagnoses; machine learning; deep learning; classification

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Breast cancer is a common and life-threatening disease among women worldwide. Machine learning, specifically deep learning, has shown potential in early detection of breast cancer. This paper proposes a new deep model for breast cancer classification by incorporating techniques such as granular computing, shortcut connection, learnable activation functions, and attention mechanism, and demonstrates its superiority through comparing with existing deep models and case studies.
Breast cancer is one of the most prevalent cancers among women worldwide, and early detection of the disease can be lifesaving. Detecting breast cancer early allows for treatment to begin faster, increasing the chances of a successful outcome. Machine learning helps in the early detection of breast cancer even in places where there is no access to a specialist doctor. The rapid advancement of machine learning, and particularly deep learning, leads to an increase in the medical imaging community's interest in applying these techniques to improve the accuracy of cancer screening. Most of the data related to diseases is scarce. On the other hand, deep-learning models need much data to learn well. For this reason, the existing deep-learning models on medical images cannot work as well as other images. To overcome this limitation and improve breast cancer classification detection, inspired by two state-of-the-art deep networks, GoogLeNet and residual block, and developing several new features, this paper proposes a new deep model to classify breast cancer. Utilizing adopted granular computing, shortcut connection, two learnable activation functions instead of traditional activation functions, and an attention mechanism is expected to improve the accuracy of diagnosis and consequently decrease the load on doctors. Granular computing can improve diagnosis accuracy by capturing more detailed and fine-grained information about cancer images. The proposed model's superiority is demonstrated by comparing it to several state-of-the-art deep models and existing works using two case studies. The proposed model achieved an accuracy of 93% and 95% on ultrasound images and breast histopathology images, respectively.

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