Paper
4 March 2011 Texture feature selection with relevance learning to classify interstitial lung disease patterns
Markus B. Huber, Kerstin Bunte, Mahesh B. Nagarajan, Michael Biehl, Lawrence A. Ray, Axel Wismueller
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Abstract
The Generalized Matrix Learning Vector Quantization (GMLVQ) is used to estimate the relevance of texture features in their ability to classify interstitial lung disease patterns in high-resolution computed tomography (HRCT) images. After a stochastic gradient descent, the GMLVQ algorithm provides a discriminative distance measure of relevance factors, which can account for pairwise correlations between different texture features and their importance for the classification of healthy and diseased patterns. Texture features were extracted from gray-level co-occurrence matrices (GLCMs), and were ranked and selected according to their relevance obtained by GMLVQ and, for comparison, to a mutual information (MI) criteria. A k-nearest-neighbor (kNN) classifier and a Support Vector Machine with a radial basis function kernel (SVMrbf) were optimized in a 10-fold crossvalidation for different texture feature sets. In our experiment with real-world data, the feature sets selected by the GMLVQ approach had a significantly better classification performance compared with feature sets selected by a MI ranking.
© (2011) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Markus B. Huber, Kerstin Bunte, Mahesh B. Nagarajan, Michael Biehl, Lawrence A. Ray, and Axel Wismueller "Texture feature selection with relevance learning to classify interstitial lung disease patterns", Proc. SPIE 7963, Medical Imaging 2011: Computer-Aided Diagnosis, 796318 (4 March 2011); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.877894
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KEYWORDS
Lung

Image classification

Prototyping

Distance measurement

Feature selection

Computed tomography

Stochastic processes

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