Qingbo Ji, Tingshuo Yin, Pengfei Zhang, Qingquan Liu, Changbo Hou
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
The morphological analysis test item of urine red blood cells is referred to as “extracorporeal renal biopsy,” which holds significant importance for medical department testing. However, the accuracy of existing urine red blood cell morphology analyzers is suboptimal, and they are not widely utilized in medical examinations. Challenges include low image spatial resolution, blurred distinguishing features between cells, difficulty in fine-grained feature extraction, and insufficient data volume. This article aims to improve the classification accuracy of low-resolution urine red blood cells. This paper proposes a super-resolution method based on category-aware loss and an RBC-MIX data enhancement approach. It optimizes the cross-entropy loss to maximize the classification boundary and improve intra-class tightness and inter-class difference, achieving fine-grained classification of low-resolution urine red blood cells. Experimental outcomes demonstrate that with this method, an accuracy rate of 97.8% can be achieved for low-resolution urine red blood cell images. This algorithm attains outstanding classification performance for low-resolution urine red blood cells with only category labels required. This method can serve as a practical reference for urine red blood cell morphology examination items.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Digital Imaging (JDI) is the official peer-reviewed journal of the Society for Imaging Informatics in Medicine (SIIM). JDI’s goal is to enhance the exchange of knowledge encompassed by the general topic of Imaging Informatics in Medicine such as research and practice in clinical, engineering, and information technologies and techniques in all medical imaging environments. JDI topics are of interest to researchers, developers, educators, physicians, and imaging informatics professionals.
Suggested Topics
PACS and component systems; imaging informatics for the enterprise; image-enabled electronic medical records; RIS and HIS; digital image acquisition; image processing; image data compression; 3D, visualization, and multimedia; speech recognition; computer-aided diagnosis; facilities design; imaging vocabularies and ontologies; Transforming the Radiological Interpretation Process (TRIP™); DICOM and other standards; workflow and process modeling and simulation; quality assurance; archive integrity and security; teleradiology; digital mammography; and radiological informatics education.