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1.
Entropy (Basel) ; 25(2)2023 Feb 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36832736

ABSTRACT

The ability to build more robust clustering from many clustering models with different solutions is relevant in scenarios with privacy-preserving constraints, where data features have a different nature or where these features are not available in a single computation unit. Additionally, with the booming number of multi-view data, but also of clustering algorithms capable of producing a wide variety of representations for the same objects, merging clustering partitions to achieve a single clustering result has become a complex problem with numerous applications. To tackle this problem, we propose a clustering fusion algorithm that takes existing clustering partitions acquired from multiple vector space models, sources, or views, and merges them into a single partition. Our merging method relies on an information theory model based on Kolmogorov complexity that was originally proposed for unsupervised multi-view learning. Our proposed algorithm features a stable merging process and shows competitive results over several real and artificial datasets in comparison with other state-of-the-art methods that have similar goals.

2.
J Imaging ; 7(8)2021 Aug 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34460779

ABSTRACT

Age-related macular degeneration (ARMD), a major cause of sight impairment for elderly people, is still not well understood despite intensive research. Measuring the size of the lesions in the fundus is the main biomarker of the severity of the disease and as such is widely used in clinical trials yet only relies on manual segmentation. Artificial intelligence, in particular automatic image analysis based on neural networks, has a major role to play in better understanding the disease, by analyzing the intrinsic optical properties of dry ARMD lesions from patient images. In this paper, we propose a comparison of automatic segmentation methods (classical computer vision method, machine learning method and deep learning method) in an unsupervised context applied on cSLO IR images. Among the methods compared, we propose an adaptation of a fully convolutional network, called W-net, as an efficient method for the segmentation of ARMD lesions. Unlike supervised segmentation methods, our algorithm does not require annotated data which are very difficult to obtain in this application. Our method was tested on a dataset of 328 images and has shown to reach higher quality results than other compared unsupervised methods with a F1 score of 0.87, while having a more stable model, even though in some specific cases, texture/edges-based methods can produce relevant results.

3.
J Imaging ; 6(7)2020 Jun 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34460650

ABSTRACT

Age-Related Macular Degeneration (ARMD) is a progressive eye disease that slowly causes patients to go blind. For several years now, it has been an important research field to try to understand how the disease progresses and find effective medical treatments. Researchers have been mostly interested in studying the evolution of the lesions using different techniques ranging from manual annotation to mathematical models of the disease. However, artificial intelligence for ARMD image analysis has become one of the main research focuses to study the progression of the disease, as accurate manual annotation of its evolution has proved difficult using traditional methods even for experienced practicians. In this paper, we propose a deep learning architecture that can detect changes in the eye fundus images and assess the progression of the disease. Our method is based on joint autoencoders and is fully unsupervised. Our algorithm has been applied to pairs of images from different eye fundus images time series of 24 ARMD patients. Our method has been shown to be quite effective when compared with other methods from the literature, including non-neural network based algorithms that still are the current standard to follow the disease progression and change detection methods from other fields.

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