Scopus İndeksli Yayınlar Koleksiyonu / Scopus Indexed Publications Collection
Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://hdl.handle.net/11147/7148
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Article Determining Area Affected by Corona in Lung Computed Tomography Images by Three-Phase Level Set and Shearlet Transform(Wolters Kluwer Medknow Publications, 2025) Aghazadeh, Nasser; Noras, Parisa; Moghaddasighamchi, SevdaBackground:The COVID-19 pandemic has created a critical global situation, causing widespread challenges and numerous fatalities due to severe respiratory complications. Since lung involvement is a key factor in COVID-19 diagnosis and treatment, accurate identification of infected regions in lung images is essential.Methods:We propose a multiphase segmentation method based on the level set framework to determine lunginvolved areas. The shearlet transform, a high-precision directional multiresolution transform, is employed to guide the gradient flow in the level set formulation. Additionally, the phase stretch transform (PST) is applied to enhance the contrast between infected and healthy regions, improving convergence speed during segmentation.Results:The proposed algorithm was tested on 500 lung images. The method accurately identified infected areas, enabling precise calculation of the percentage of lung involvement. The use of the shearlet transform also allowed clear delineation of ground-glass opacity boundaries.Conclusion:The proposed multiphase level set method, enhanced with shearlet and phase stretch transforms, effectively segments COVID-19-infected lung regions. This approach improves segmentation accuracy and computational efficiency, offering a reliable tool for quantitative lung involvement assessment.Conference Object Df-Segdiff: Adiffusion Segmentation Model Using a New Distributed Parallel Computing Algorithm(IEEE, 2024) Mi, Hancang; Gan, Hong-Seng; Wang, Xiaoyi; Shimizu, Akinobu; Ramlee, Muhammad Hanif; Unlu, Mehmet ZubeyirBrain tumours are among the most life-threatening diseases, and automatic segmentation of brain tumours from medical images is crucial for clinicians to identify and quantify tumour regions with high precision. While traditional segmentation models have laid the groundwork, diffusion models have since been developed to better manage complex medical data. However, diffusion models often face challenges related to insufficient parallel computing power and inefficient GPU utilization. To address these issues, we propose the DF-SegDiff model, which includes diffusion segmentation, parallel data processing, a distributed training model, a dynamic balancing parameter and model fusion. This approach significantly reduces training time while achieving an average Dice score of 0.87, with several samples reaching Dice values close to 0.94. By combining BRATS2020 with the Medical Segmentation Decathlon dataset, we also integrated a comprehensive dataset containing 800 training samples and 53 test samples. Evaluation of the model using Dice, IoU, and other relevant metrics demonstrates that our method outperforms current state-of-the-art techniques.
