TL;DR: A region-based measure of image edge profile acutance is proposed which characterizes the transition in density of a region of interest (ROI) along normals to the ROI at every boundary pixel and indicates the importance of including lesion edge definition with shape information for classification of tumors.
Abstract: Most benign breast tumors possess well-defined, sharp boundaries that delineate them from surrounding tissues, as opposed to malignant tumors. Computer techniques proposed to date for tumor analysis have concentrated on shape factors of tumor regions and texture measures. While shape measures based on contours of tumor regions can indicate differences in shape complexities between circumscribed and spiculated tumors, they are not designed to characterize the density variations across the boundary of a tumor. Here, the authors propose a region-based measure of image edge profile acutance which characterizes the transition in density of a region of interest (ROI) along normals to the ROI at every boundary pixel. The authors investigate the potential of acutance in quantifying the sharpness of the boundaries of tumors, and propose its application to discriminate between benign and malignant mammographic tumors. In addition, they study the complementary use of various shape factors based upon the shape of the ROI, such as compactness. Fourier descriptors, moments, and chord-length statistics to distinguish between circumscribed and spiculated tumors. Thirty-nine images from the Mammographic Image Analysis Society (MIAS) database and an additional set of 15 local cases were selected for this study. The cases included 16 circumscribed benign, 7 circumscribed malignant, 12 spiculated benign, and 19 spiculated malignant lesions. All diagnoses were proven by pathologic examinations of resected tissue. The contours of the lesions were first marked by an expert radiologist using X-Paint and X-Windows on a SUN-SPARCstation 2 Workstation. For computation of acutance, the ROI boundaries were iteratively approximated using a split/merge and end-point adjustment technique to obtain the best-fitting polygonal approximation. The jackknife method using the Mahalanobis distance measure in the BMDP (Biomedical Programs) package was used for classification of the lesions using acutance and the shape factors as features in various combinations. Acutance alone resulted in a benign/malignant classification accuracy of 95% the MIAS cases. Compactness alone gave a circumscribed/spiculated classification rate of 92.3% with the MIAS cases. Acutance in combination with a moment-based shape measure and a Fourier descriptor-based measure gave four-group classification rate of 95% with the MIAS cases. The results indicate the importance of including lesion edge definition with shape information for classification of tumors, and that the proposed measure of acutance fills this need.
TL;DR: Dihydroperimidine squarylium dyes have been found to be particularly effective when used as acutance and antihalation dyes for photothermographic and photographic articles.
Abstract: Dihydroperimidine squarylium dyes have been found to be particularly effective when used as acutance and antihalation dyes for photothermographic and photographic articles. The dihydroperimidine squarylium dye has the nucleus (I).
TL;DR: In this article, a novel model of detection-guided CycleGAN (DE-CycleGAN) is proposed to enhance the weak targets for the purpose of accurate vehicle detection, where a backbone GAN with a target-guided branch is learned in the absence of paired images.
Abstract: Vehicle detection is a very important application of remote sensing. However, suffering from the low acutance and insufficient color information, the detection of weak vehicles in satellite imagery still remains a challenge. Image enhancement can improve the visual effects of remote sensing images. Nevertheless, most existing image enhancement methods aim to improve the quality of the entire image without target guidance, which have ambiguous contributions to the detection performance. Methods based on generative adversarial networks (GANs) have realized image enhancement with target guidance by the addition of target-guided branches, but paired training data is not available in some scenarios. In this article, a novel model of detection-guided CycleGAN (DE-CycleGAN) is proposed to enhance the weak targets for the purpose of accurate vehicle detection, where a backbone GAN with a target-guided branch is learned in the absence of paired images. Specifically, enhancements of two levels are mutually executed. At the image level, the color information of the entire satellite image is enriched by refined CycleGAN, and its sharpness is enhanced by the gradient enhancement model. At the object level, the target-guided branch for detection is added to enhance features of the target. The experimental results validate that the detection performance has been significantly improved on the images enhanced by the proposed DE-CycleGAN model, which shows a positive effect on weak target detection.
TL;DR: In this article, the relation between the image asymmetry and the acutance of an edge is discussed, and the convolution of the functions of the lens and the photographic emulsion gives the transmission function of a complete system.
Abstract: Equipment is described for obtaining the contrast-transmission curves for two cases not realized by previous designs. First, for asymmetric images, the phases as well as the amplitudes of the Fourier transforms are measured. The relation between the image asymmetry and the acutance of an edge is also discussed. Second, the convolution of the functions of the lens and the photographic emulsion gives the transmission function of a complete system. The principal optical arrangement is undisturbed for the two determinations. In the second case, modulation of the flux is accomplished by polarizers. The differences between the highest and lowest densities are presented directly since density relates well to perception by the eye. These data are then recalculated to light-intensity functions in the emulsion, extending the concept of transmission functions to the emulsion. Some experimental results are given for Panatomic-X emulsion, and limitations of the methods are discussed.
TL;DR: Reasons for the unsuitability of resolving power as a criterion of the performance of an optical or photographic system in general are outlined and the newer concepts of acutance and spread function are introduced.
Abstract: Reasons for the unsuitability of resolving power as a criterion of the performance of an optical or photographic system in general are outlined and the newer concepts of acutance and spread function are introduced. The method of computing the edge trace from the spread function is described. The procedure known as convolution is introduced and exemplified by computing the image of a sinusoidal test object. It is shown that such an image is also sinusoidal and of the same frequency as the object but of different modulation and phase and that the properties of such an image give rise to the concept of sine-wave response.