posted on 2019-08-23, 14:33authored byY-D Zhang, Y Zhang, P Phillips, Z Dong, S Wang
Multiple sclerosis (MS) is a severe brain disease. Early detection can provide timely treatment. Fractal dimension can provide statistical index of pattern changes with scale at a given brain image. In this study, our team used susceptibility weighted imaging technique to obtain 676 MS slices and 880 healthy slices. We used synthetic minority oversampling technique to process the unbalanced dataset. Then, we used Canny edge detector to extract distinguishing edges. The Minkowski–Bouligand dimension was a fractal dimension estimation method and used to extract features from edges. Single hidden layer neural network was used as the classifier. Finally, we proposed a three-segment representation biogeography-based optimization to train the classifier. Our method achieved a sensitivity of 97.78±1.29%, a specificity of 97.82±1.60% and an accuracy of 97.80±1.40%. The proposed method is superior to seven state-of-the-art methods in terms of sensitivity and accuracy.
Funding
Natural Science Foundation of China (61602250), Open
Research Fund of Hunan Provincial Key Laboratory of Network Investigational Technology
(2016WLZC013), Open Fund of Key Laboratory
of Symbolic Computation and Knowledge Engineering of Ministry of Education, Jilin University (93K172016K17), Natural Science Foundation
of Jiangsu Province (BK20150983), Program of
Natural Science Research of Jiangsu Higher Education Institutions (16KJB520025, 15KJB470010),
Open fund for Jiangsu Key Laboratory of Advanced
Manufacturing Technology (HGAMTL1601), Open
fund of Key Laboratory of Guangxi High Schools
Complex System and Computational Intelligence
(2016CSCI01), Opening Project of State Key Laboratory of Digital Publishing Technology.
History
Citation
FRACTALS-COMPLEX GEOMETRY PATTERNS AND SCALING IN NATURE AND SOCIETY, 2017, 25 (4)
Author affiliation
/Organisation/COLLEGE OF SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING/Department of Informatics
Version
VoR (Version of Record)
Published in
FRACTALS-COMPLEX GEOMETRY PATTERNS AND SCALING IN NATURE AND SOCIETY