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Publications

Publications by Jaime Cardoso

2021

Evaluation of the impact of domain adaptation on segmentation of Multiple Sclerosis lesions in MRI

Authors
de Sousa, IM; Oliveira, Md; Lisboa Filho, PN; Santos Cardoso, Jd;

Publication
IEEE International Conference on Bioinformatics and Biomedicine, BIBM 2021, Houston, TX, USA, December 9-12, 2021

Abstract
Multiple Sclerosis (MS) is a chronic and inflammatory disorder that causes degeneration of axons in brain white matter and spinal cord. Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) is extensively used to identify MS lesions and evaluate the progression of the disease, but the manual identification and quantification of lesions are time consuming and error-prone tasks. Thus, automated Deep Learning methods, in special Convolutional Neural Networks (CNNs), are becoming popular to segment medical images. It has been noticed that the performance of those methods tends to decrease when applied to MRI acquired under different protocols. The aim of this work is to statistically evaluate the possible influence of domain adaptation during the training process of CNNs models for segmenting MS lesions in MRI. The segmentation models were tested on MRIs (FLAIR and T1) of 20 patients diagnosed with Multiple Sclerosis. The set of segmented images of each different model was compared statistically, through the metrics Dice Similarity Coefficient (DSC), Predictive Positive Value (PPV) and Absolute Volume Difference (AVD). The results indicate that the domain adapted training can improve the performance of automatic segmentation methods, by CNNs, and have great potential to be used in medical clinics in the future. © 2021 IEEE.

2023

Rethinking low-cost microscopy workflow: Image enhancement using deep based Extended Depth of Field methods

Authors
Albuquerque, T; Rosado, L; Cruz, RPM; Vasconcelos, MJM; Oliveira, T; Cardoso, JS;

Publication
Intell. Syst. Appl.

Abstract
Microscopic techniques in low-to-middle income countries are constrained by the lack of adequate equipment and trained operators. Since light microscopy delivers crucial methods for the diagnosis and screening of numerous diseases, several efforts have been made by the scientific community to develop low-cost devices such as 3D-printed portable microscopes. Nevertheless, these devices present some drawbacks that directly affect image quality: the capture of the samples is done via mobile phones; more affordable lenses are usually used, leading to poorer physical properties and images with lower depth of field; misalignments in the microscopic set-up regarding optical, mechanical, and illumination components are frequent, causing image distortions such as chromatic aberrations. This work investigates several pre-processing methods to tackle the presented issues and proposed a new workflow for low-cost microscopy. Additionally, two new deep learning models based on Convolutional Neural Networks are also proposed (EDoF-CNN-Fast and EDoF-CNN-Pairwise) to generate Extended Depth of Field (EDoF) images, and compared against state-of-the-art approaches. The models were tested using two different datasets of cytology microscopic images: public Cervix93 and a new dataset that has been made publicly available containing images captured with µSmartScope. Experimental results demonstrate that the proposed workflow can achieve state-of-the-art performance when generating EDoF images from low-cost microscopes. © 2022 The Author(s)

2023

Symmetry-based regularization in deep breast cancer screening

Authors
Castro, E; Pereira, JC; Cardoso, JS;

Publication
MEDICAL IMAGE ANALYSIS

Abstract
Breast cancer is the most common and lethal form of cancer in women. Recent efforts have focused on developing accurate neural network-based computer-aided diagnosis systems for screening to help anticipate this disease. The ultimate goal is to reduce mortality and improve quality of life after treatment. Due to the difficulty in collecting and annotating data in this domain, data scarcity is - and will continue to be - a limiting factor. In this work, we present a unified view of different regularization methods that incorporate domain-known symmetries in the model. Three general strategies were followed: (i) data augmentation, (ii) invariance promotion in the loss function, and (iii) the use of equivariant architectures. Each of these strategies encodes different priors on the functions learned by the model and can be readily introduced in most settings. Empirically we show that the proposed symmetry-based regularization procedures improve generalization to unseen examples. This advantage is verified in different scenarios, datasets and model architectures. We hope that both the principle of symmetry-based regularization and the concrete methods presented can guide development towards more data-efficient methods for breast cancer screening as well as other medical imaging domains.

2023

Two-Stage Framework for Faster Semantic Segmentation

Authors
Cruz, R; Silva, DTE; Goncalves, T; Carneiro, D; Cardoso, JS;

Publication
SENSORS

Abstract
Semantic segmentation consists of classifying each pixel according to a set of classes. Conventional models spend as much effort classifying easy-to-segment pixels as they do classifying hard-to-segment pixels. This is inefficient, especially when deploying to situations with computational constraints. In this work, we propose a framework wherein the model first produces a rough segmentation of the image, and then patches of the image estimated as hard to segment are refined. The framework is evaluated in four datasets (autonomous driving and biomedical), across four state-of-the-art architectures. Our method accelerates inference time by four, with additional gains for training time, at the cost of some output quality.

2023

Deep Minutiae Fingerprint Extraction Using Equivariance Priors

Authors
Gouveia, M; Castro, E; Rebelo, A; Cardoso, JS; Patrão, B;

Publication
Proceedings of the 16th International Joint Conference on Biomedical Engineering Systems and Technologies, BIOSTEC 2023, Volume 4: BIOSIGNALS, Lisbon, Portugal, February 16-18, 2023.

Abstract

2023

Annotating for Artificial Intelligence Applications in Digital Pathology: A Practical Guide for Pathologists and Researchers

Authors
Montezuma, D; Oliveira, SP; Neto, PC; Oliveira, D; Monteiro, A; Cardoso, JS; Macedo-Pinto, I;

Publication
MODERN PATHOLOGY

Abstract
Training machine learning models for artificial intelligence (AI) applications in pathology often requires extensive annotation by human experts, but there is little guidance on the subject. In this work, we aimed to describe our experience and provide a simple, useful, and practical guide addressing annotation strategies for AI development in computational pathology. Annotation methodology will vary significantly depending on the specific study's objectives, but common difficulties will be present across different settings. We summarize key aspects and issue guiding principles regarding team interaction, ground-truth quality assessment, different annotation types, and available software and hardware options and address common difficulties while annotating. This guide was specifically designed for pathology annotation, intending to help pathologists, other researchers, and AI developers with this process.(c) 2022 THE AUTHORS. Published by Elsevier Inc. on behalf of the United States & Canadian Academy of Pathology. This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons. org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).

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