TY - JOUR
T1 - Segmentation of retinal blood vessels using the radial projection and semi-supervised approach
AU - You, Xinge
AU - Peng, Qinmu
AU - Yuan, Yuan
AU - Cheung, Yiu Ming
AU - Lei, Jiajia
PY - 2011/10
Y1 - 2011/10
N2 - Automatic segmentation of retinal blood vessels has become a necessary diagnostic procedure in ophthalmology. The blood vessels consist of two types of vessels, i.e., thin vessels and wide vessels. Therefore, a segmentation method may require two different processes to treat different vessels. However, traditional segmentation algorithms hardly draw a distinction between thin and wide vessels, but deal with them together. The major problems of these methods are as follows: (1) If more emphasis is placed on the extraction of thin vessels, the wide vessels tend to be over detected; and more artificial vessels are generated, too. (2) If more attention is paid on the wide vessels, the thin and low contrast vessels are likely to be missing. To overcome these problems, a novel scheme of extracting the retinal vessels based on the radial projection and semi-supervised method is presented in this paper. The radial projection method is used to locate the vessel centerlines which include the low-contrast and narrow vessels. Further, we modify the steerable complex wavelet to provide better capability of enhancing vessels under different scales, and construct the vector feature to represent the vessel pixel by line strength. Then, semi-supervised self-training is used for extraction of the major structures of vessels. The final segmentation is obtained by the union of the two types of vessels. Our approach is tested on two publicly available databases. Experiment results show that the method can achieve improved detection of thin vessels and decrease false detection of vessels in pathological regions compared to rival solutions.
AB - Automatic segmentation of retinal blood vessels has become a necessary diagnostic procedure in ophthalmology. The blood vessels consist of two types of vessels, i.e., thin vessels and wide vessels. Therefore, a segmentation method may require two different processes to treat different vessels. However, traditional segmentation algorithms hardly draw a distinction between thin and wide vessels, but deal with them together. The major problems of these methods are as follows: (1) If more emphasis is placed on the extraction of thin vessels, the wide vessels tend to be over detected; and more artificial vessels are generated, too. (2) If more attention is paid on the wide vessels, the thin and low contrast vessels are likely to be missing. To overcome these problems, a novel scheme of extracting the retinal vessels based on the radial projection and semi-supervised method is presented in this paper. The radial projection method is used to locate the vessel centerlines which include the low-contrast and narrow vessels. Further, we modify the steerable complex wavelet to provide better capability of enhancing vessels under different scales, and construct the vector feature to represent the vessel pixel by line strength. Then, semi-supervised self-training is used for extraction of the major structures of vessels. The final segmentation is obtained by the union of the two types of vessels. Our approach is tested on two publicly available databases. Experiment results show that the method can achieve improved detection of thin vessels and decrease false detection of vessels in pathological regions compared to rival solutions.
KW - Radial projection
KW - Retinal images
KW - Steerable complex wavelet
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=79958792462&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.patcog.2011.01.007
DO - 10.1016/j.patcog.2011.01.007
M3 - 文章
AN - SCOPUS:79958792462
SN - 0031-3203
VL - 44
SP - 2314
EP - 2324
JO - Pattern Recognition
JF - Pattern Recognition
IS - 10-11
ER -