95 resultados para semantic segmentation
Resumo:
To correctly evaluate semantic technologies and to obtain results that can be easily integrated, we need to put evaluations under the scope of a unique software quality model. This paper presents SemQuaRE, a quality model for semantic technologies. SemQuaRE is based on the SQuaRE standard and describes a set of quality characteristics specific to semantic technologies and the quality measures that can be used for their measurement. It also provides detailed formulas for the calculation of such measures. The paper shows that SemQuaRE is complete with respect to current evaluation trends and that it has been successfully applied in practice.
Resumo:
La tomografía axial computerizada (TAC) es la modalidad de imagen médica preferente para el estudio de enfermedades pulmonares y el análisis de su vasculatura. La segmentación general de vasos en pulmón ha sido abordada en profundidad a lo largo de los últimos años por la comunidad científica que trabaja en el campo de procesamiento de imagen; sin embargo, la diferenciación entre irrigaciones arterial y venosa es aún un problema abierto. De hecho, la separación automática de arterias y venas está considerado como uno de los grandes retos futuros del procesamiento de imágenes biomédicas. La segmentación arteria-vena (AV) permitiría el estudio de ambas irrigaciones por separado, lo cual tendría importantes consecuencias en diferentes escenarios médicos y múltiples enfermedades pulmonares o estados patológicos. Características como la densidad, geometría, topología y tamaño de los vasos sanguíneos podrían ser analizados en enfermedades que conllevan remodelación de la vasculatura pulmonar, haciendo incluso posible el descubrimiento de nuevos biomarcadores específicos que aún hoy en dípermanecen ocultos. Esta diferenciación entre arterias y venas también podría ayudar a la mejora y el desarrollo de métodos de procesamiento de las distintas estructuras pulmonares. Sin embargo, el estudio del efecto de las enfermedades en los árboles arterial y venoso ha sido inviable hasta ahora a pesar de su indudable utilidad. La extrema complejidad de los árboles vasculares del pulmón hace inabordable una separación manual de ambas estructuras en un tiempo realista, fomentando aún más la necesidad de diseñar herramientas automáticas o semiautomáticas para tal objetivo. Pero la ausencia de casos correctamente segmentados y etiquetados conlleva múltiples limitaciones en el desarrollo de sistemas de separación AV, en los cuales son necesarias imágenes de referencia tanto para entrenar como para validar los algoritmos. Por ello, el diseño de imágenes sintéticas de TAC pulmonar podría superar estas dificultades ofreciendo la posibilidad de acceso a una base de datos de casos pseudoreales bajo un entorno restringido y controlado donde cada parte de la imagen (incluyendo arterias y venas) está unívocamente diferenciada. En esta Tesis Doctoral abordamos ambos problemas, los cuales están fuertemente interrelacionados. Primero se describe el diseño de una estrategia para generar, automáticamente, fantomas computacionales de TAC de pulmón en humanos. Partiendo de conocimientos a priori, tanto biológicos como de características de imagen de CT, acerca de la topología y relación entre las distintas estructuras pulmonares, el sistema desarrollado es capaz de generar vías aéreas, arterias y venas pulmonares sintéticas usando métodos de crecimiento iterativo, que posteriormente se unen para formar un pulmón simulado con características realistas. Estos casos sintéticos, junto a imágenes reales de TAC sin contraste, han sido usados en el desarrollo de un método completamente automático de segmentación/separación AV. La estrategia comprende una primera extracción genérica de vasos pulmonares usando partículas espacio-escala, y una posterior clasificación AV de tales partículas mediante el uso de Graph-Cuts (GC) basados en la similitud con arteria o vena (obtenida con algoritmos de aprendizaje automático) y la inclusión de información de conectividad entre partículas. La validación de los fantomas pulmonares se ha llevado a cabo mediante inspección visual y medidas cuantitativas relacionadas con las distribuciones de intensidad, dispersión de estructuras y relación entre arterias y vías aéreas, los cuales muestran una buena correspondencia entre los pulmones reales y los generados sintéticamente. La evaluación del algoritmo de segmentación AV está basada en distintas estrategias de comprobación de la exactitud en la clasificación de vasos, las cuales revelan una adecuada diferenciación entre arterias y venas tanto en los casos reales como en los sintéticos, abriendo así un amplio abanico de posibilidades en el estudio clínico de enfermedades cardiopulmonares y en el desarrollo de metodologías y nuevos algoritmos para el análisis de imágenes pulmonares. ABSTRACT Computed tomography (CT) is the reference image modality for the study of lung diseases and pulmonary vasculature. Lung vessel segmentation has been widely explored by the biomedical image processing community, however, differentiation of arterial from venous irrigations is still an open problem. Indeed, automatic separation of arterial and venous trees has been considered during last years as one of the main future challenges in the field. Artery-Vein (AV) segmentation would be useful in different medical scenarios and multiple pulmonary diseases or pathological states, allowing the study of arterial and venous irrigations separately. Features such as density, geometry, topology and size of vessels could be analyzed in diseases that imply vasculature remodeling, making even possible the discovery of new specific biomarkers that remain hidden nowadays. Differentiation between arteries and veins could also enhance or improve methods processing pulmonary structures. Nevertheless, AV segmentation has been unfeasible until now in clinical routine despite its objective usefulness. The huge complexity of pulmonary vascular trees makes a manual segmentation of both structures unfeasible in realistic time, encouraging the design of automatic or semiautomatic tools to perform the task. However, this lack of proper labeled cases seriously limits in the development of AV segmentation systems, where reference standards are necessary in both algorithm training and validation stages. For that reason, the design of synthetic CT images of the lung could overcome these difficulties by providing a database of pseudorealistic cases in a constrained and controlled scenario where each part of the image (including arteries and veins) is differentiated unequivocally. In this Ph.D. Thesis we address both interrelated problems. First, the design of a complete framework to automatically generate computational CT phantoms of the human lung is described. Starting from biological and imagebased knowledge about the topology and relationships between structures, the system is able to generate synthetic pulmonary arteries, veins, and airways using iterative growth methods that can be merged into a final simulated lung with realistic features. These synthetic cases, together with labeled real CT datasets, have been used as reference for the development of a fully automatic pulmonary AV segmentation/separation method. The approach comprises a vessel extraction stage using scale-space particles and their posterior artery-vein classification using Graph-Cuts (GC) based on arterial/venous similarity scores obtained with a Machine Learning (ML) pre-classification step and particle connectivity information. Validation of pulmonary phantoms from visual examination and quantitative measurements of intensity distributions, dispersion of structures and relationships between pulmonary air and blood flow systems, show good correspondence between real and synthetic lungs. The evaluation of the Artery-Vein (AV) segmentation algorithm, based on different strategies to assess the accuracy of vessel particles classification, reveal accurate differentiation between arteries and vein in both real and synthetic cases that open a huge range of possibilities in the clinical study of cardiopulmonary diseases and the development of methodological approaches for the analysis of pulmonary images.
Resumo:
Automatic segmentation using univariate and multivariate techniques provides more objective and efficient segmentations of the river systems (Alber & Piégay, 2011) and can be complementary to the expert criteria traditionally used (Brenden et al., 2008) INTEREST: A powerful tool to objectively segment the continuity of rivers, which is required for diagnosing problems associated to human impacts OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the potentiality of univariate and multivariate methods in the assessment of river adjustments produced by flow regulation
Resumo:
Overrecentdecades,remotesensinghasemergedasaneffectivetoolforimprov- ing agriculture productivity. In particular, many works have dealt with the problem of identifying characteristics or phenomena of crops and orchards on different scales using remote sensed images. Since the natural processes are scale dependent and most of them are hierarchically structured, the determination of optimal study scales is mandatory in understanding these processes and their interactions. The concept of multi-scale/multi- resolution inherent to OBIA methodologies allows the scale problem to be dealt with. But for that multi-scale and hierarchical segmentation algorithms are required. The question that remains unsolved is to determine the suitable scale segmentation that allows different objects and phenomena to be characterized in a single image. In this work, an adaptation of the Simple Linear Iterative Clustering (SLIC) algorithm to perform a multi-scale hierarchi- cal segmentation of satellite images is proposed. The selection of the optimal multi-scale segmentation for different regions of the image is carried out by evaluating the intra- variability and inter-heterogeneity of the regions obtained on each scale with respect to the parent-regions defined by the coarsest scale. To achieve this goal, an objective function, that combines weighted variance and the global Moran index, has been used. Two different kinds of experiment have been carried out, generating the number of regions on each scale through linear and dyadic approaches. This methodology has allowed, on the one hand, the detection of objects on different scales and, on the other hand, to represent them all in a sin- gle image. Altogether, the procedure provides the user with a better comprehension of the land cover, the objects on it and the phenomena occurring.
Resumo:
The new generation of artificial satellites is providing a huge amount of Earth observation images whose exploitation can report invaluable benefits, both economical and environmental. However, only a small fraction of this data volume has been analyzed, mainly due to the large human resources needed for that task. In this sense, the development of unsupervised methodologies for the analysis of these images is a priority. In this work, a new unsupervised segmentation algorithm for satellite images is proposed. This algorithm is based on the rough-set theory, and it is inspired by a previous segmentation algorithm defined in the RGB color domain. The main contributions of the new algorithm are: (i) extending the original algorithm to four spectral bands; (ii) the concept of the superpixel is used in order to define the neighborhood similarity of a pixel adapted to the local characteristics of each image; (iii) and two new region merged strategies are proposed and evaluated in order to establish the final number of regions in the segmented image. The experimental results show that the proposed approach improves the results provided by the original method when both are applied to satellite images with different spectral and spatial resolutions.