Conference Paper/Proceeding/Abstract 1073 views
Graph Based Lymphatic Vessel Wall Localisation and Tracking
Graph-Based Representations in Pattern Recognition, Volume: 9069, Pages: 345 - 354
Swansea University Author: Xianghua Xie
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DOI (Published version): 10.1007/978-3-319-18224-7_34
Abstract
We present a novel hidden Markov model (HMM) based approach to segment and track the lymph vessel in confocal microscopy images. The vessel borders are parameterised by radial basis functions (RBFs) so that the number of tracking points are reduced to a very few. The proposed method tracks the hidde...
Published in: | Graph-Based Representations in Pattern Recognition |
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Published: |
Springer
2015
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Online Access: |
http://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007%2F978-3-319-18224-7_34 |
URI: | https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa22232 |
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Abstract: |
We present a novel hidden Markov model (HMM) based approach to segment and track the lymph vessel in confocal microscopy images. The vessel borders are parameterised by radial basis functions (RBFs) so that the number of tracking points are reduced to a very few. The proposed method tracks the hidden states that determine the border location along a set of normal lines obtained from the previous frame. The border observation is derived from edge-based features using steerable filters. Two Gaussian probability distributions for the vessel border and background are used to infer the emission probability. The transition probability is learnt by using the Baum-Welch algorithm. A new optimisation method for determining the best sequence of the hidden states is introduced. We transform the segmentation problem into a minimisation of s-excess graph cost. Each node in the graph corresponds to one state, and the weight for each node is defined using its emission probability. The inter-relation between neighbouring nodes is defined using the transition probability. Its optimal solution can be found in polynomial time using the s-t cut algorithm. Qualitative and quantitative analysis of the method on lymphatic vessel segmentation show superior performance of the proposed method compared to the traditional Viterbi algorithm. |
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Keywords: |
Graph cut, image segmentation, tracking, medical image analysis |
College: |
Faculty of Science and Engineering |
Start Page: |
345 |
End Page: |
354 |