Redirigiendo al acceso original de articulo en 24 segundos...
Inicio  /  Applied Sciences  /  Vol: 13 Par: 8 (2023)  /  Artículo
ARTÍCULO
TITULO

Deep Learning Methods for Bug Bite Classification: An End-to-End System

Bojan Ilijoski    
Katarina Trojachanec Dineva    
Biljana Tojtovska Ribarski    
Petar Petrov    
Teodora Mladenovska    
Milena Trajanoska    
Ivana Gjorshoska and Petre Lameski    

Resumen

A bite from a bug may expose the affected person to serious, life-threatening conditions, which may require immediate medical attention. The identification of the bug bite may be challenging even for experienced medical personnel due to the different manifestations of the bites and similarity to other skin conditions. This motivated our work on a computer-aided system that offers information on the bug bite based on the classification of bug bite images. Recently, there have been significant advances of methods for image classification for the detection of various skin conditions. However, there are very few sources that discuss the classification of bug bites. The goal of our research is to fill in this gap in the literature and offer a comprehensive approach for the analysis of this topic. This includes (1) the creation of a dataset that is larger than those considered in the related sources; (2) the exploration and analysis of the application of pre-trained state-of-the-art deep learning architectures with transfer learning, used in this study to overcome the challenges of low-size datasets and computational burden; (3) the further improvement of the classification performance of the individual CNNs by proposing an ensemble of models, and finally, (4) the implementation and description of an end-to-end system for bug bite classification from images taken with mobile phones, which should be beneficial to the medical personnel in the diagnostic process. In this paper, we give a detailed discussion of the models? architecture, back-end architecture, and performance. According to the general evaluation metrics, DenseNet169 with an accuracy of 78% outperformed the other individual CNN models. However, the overall best performance (accuracy of 86%) was achieved by the proposed stacking ensemble model. These results are better than the results in the limited related work. Additionally, they show that deep CNNs and transfer learning can be successfully applied to the problem of the classification of bug bites.

 Artículos similares

       
 
Hamed Raoofi, Asa Sabahnia, Daniel Barbeau and Ali Motamedi    
Traditional methods of supervision in the construction industry are time-consuming and costly, requiring significant investments in skilled labor. However, with advancements in artificial intelligence, computer vision, and deep learning, these methods ca... ver más

 
Luana Conte, Emanuele Rizzo, Tiziana Grassi, Francesco Bagordo, Elisabetta De Matteis and Giorgio De Nunzio    
Pedigree charts remain essential in oncological genetic counseling for identifying individuals with an increased risk of developing hereditary tumors. However, this valuable data source often remains confined to paper files, going unused. We propose a co... ver más
Revista: Computation

 
Jingwen Yang and Ruohua Zhou    
Whisper speaker recognition (WSR) has received extensive attention from researchers in recent years, and it plays an important role in medical, judicial, and other fields. Among them, the establishment of a whisper dataset is very important for the study... ver más
Revista: Information

 
Wandile Nhlapho, Marcellin Atemkeng, Yusuf Brima and Jean-Claude Ndogmo    
The advent of deep learning (DL) has revolutionized medical imaging, offering unprecedented avenues for accurate disease classification and diagnosis. DL models have shown remarkable promise for classifying brain tumors from Magnetic Resonance Imaging (M... ver más
Revista: Information

 
Maryan Rizinski, Andrej Jankov, Vignesh Sankaradas, Eugene Pinsky, Igor Mishkovski and Dimitar Trajanov    
The task of company classification is traditionally performed using established standards, such as the Global Industry Classification Standard (GICS). However, these approaches heavily rely on laborious manual efforts by domain experts, resulting in slow... ver más
Revista: Information