System ID
stringlengths 8
27
| DOI
stringlengths 13
34
⌀ | Latest Version
stringclasses 1
value | PMCID
stringlengths 10
10
⌀ | PMID
float64 32.3M
35.8M
⌀ | Pub Year
int64 2.02k
2.02k
| Publication Date
stringlengths 10
10
| Publication Types
stringclasses 20
values | Source
stringclasses 5
values | Peer_Review
int64 0
1
| Title
stringlengths 46
237
| Cleaned_Abs
stringlengths 427
3.03k
| Lenght_Abs
int64 63
471
| Condition
stringlengths 8
143
| Total Citations
float64 0
842
⌀ | Journal Name
stringlengths 6
37
⌀ | Visualization Categories
stringlengths 12
287
| influence_score
float64 0
0
⌀ | popularity_alt_score
float64 0
622
⌀ | popularity_score
float64 0
0
⌀ | influence_alt_score
float64 0
1.5k
⌀ | tweets_count
float64 -1
0
⌀ | Data_origin
stringclasses 3
values | Task_(primary)
stringclasses 7
values | Modality
stringclasses 4
values |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
32804639 | 10.1109/MPULS.2020.3008354 | Yes | null | 32,804,639 | 2,020 | 2020-08-18 | Journal Article | Peer reviewed (PubMed) | 1 | ai-driven covid-19 tools to interpret quantify lung images | Qualitative interpretation is a good thing when it comes to reading lung images in the fight against coronavirus 2019 disease (COVID-19), but quantitative analysis makes radiology reporting much more comprehensive. To that end, several research groups have begun looking to artificial intelligence (AI) as a tool for reading and analyzing X-rays and computed tomography (CT) scans, and helping to diagnose and monitor COVID-19. | 63 | COVID-19 | 5 | IEEE Pulse | Other Topics | 0.000004 | 49.752 | 0.000003 | 185 | 0 | N.A. | Review | Multimodal |
10.1101/2020.08.20.20178723 | 10.1101/2020.08.20.20178723 | Yes | null | null | 2,020 | 2020-08-23 | Preprint | medRxiv | 0 | automatic analysis system of covid-19 radiographic lung images (xraycovidetector) | COVID-19 is a pandemic infectious disease caused by the SARS-CoV-2 virus, having reached more than 210 countries and territories. It produces symptoms such as fever, dry cough, dyspnea, fatigue, pneumonia, and radiological manifestations. The most common reported RX and CT findings include lung consolidation and ground-glass opacities. In this paper, we describe a machine learning-based system (XrayCoviDetector; until the image has a size ), that detects automatically, the probability that a thorax radiological image includes COVID-19 lung patterns. XrayCoviDetector has an accuracy of 0.93, a sensitivity of 0.96, and a specificity of 0.90. | 93 | COVID-19;Communicable Diseases;Cough;Dyspnea;Fatigue;Fever;Pneumonia | null | null | Specificity;Communicable Diseases;Eyeglasses | null | null | null | null | null | Self-recorded/clinical | 2. Detection/Diagnosis | X-Ray |
32703538 | 10.1067/j.cpradiol.2020.06.009 | Yes | PMC7320858 | 32,703,538 | 2,020 | 2020-07-25 | Journal Article;Review | Peer reviewed (PubMed) | 1 | current landscape of imaging and the potential role for artificial intelligence in the management of covid-19 | The clinical management of COVID-19 is challenging. Medical imaging plays a critical role in the early detection, clinical monitoring and outcomes assessment of this disease. Chest x-ray radiography and computed tomography) are the standard imaging modalities used for the structural assessment of the disease status, while functional imaging (namely, positron emission tomography) has had limited application. Artificial intelligence can enhance the predictive power and utilization of these imaging approaches and new approaches focusing on detection, stratification and prognostication are showing encouraging results. We review the current landscape of these imaging modalities and artificial intelligence approaches as applied in COVID-19 management. | 100 | COVID-19 | 8 | Curr Probl Diagn Radiol | Health Care;Other Topics | 0.000002 | 17.928 | 0.000001 | 53 | 0 | N.A. | Review | Multimodal |
10.1101/2020.04.21.20072637 | 10.1101/2020.04.21.20072637 | Yes | null | null | 2,020 | 2020-04-25 | Preprint | medRxiv | 0 | research on cnn-based models optimized by genetic algorithm and application in the diagnosis of pneumonia and covid-19 | In this research, an optimized deep learning method was proposed to explore the possibility and practicality of neural network applications in medical imaging. The method was used to achieve the goal of judging common pneumonia and even COVID-19 more effectively. Where, the genetic algorithm was taken advantage to optimize the Dropout module, which is essential in neural networks so as to improve the performance of typical neural network models. The experiment results demonstrate that the proposed method shows excellent performance and strong practicability in judging pneumonia, and the application of advanced artificial intelligence technology in the field of medical imaging has broad prospects. | 103 | COVID-19;Pneumonia | null | null | Neural Networks;Other Topics | null | null | null | null | null | External | 2. Detection/Diagnosis | X-Ray |
2003.10304 | null | Yes | null | null | 2,020 | 2020-03-23 | Preprint | arXiv | 0 | attention u-net based adversarial architectures for chest x-ray lung segmentation | Chest X-ray is the most common test among medical imaging modalities. It is applied for detection and differentiation of, among others, lung cancer, tuberculosis, and pneumonia, the last with importance due to the COVID-19 disease. Integrating computer-aided detection methods into the radiologist diagnostic pipeline, greatly reduces the doctors' workload, increasing reliability and quantitative analysis. Here we present a novel deep learning approach for lung segmentation, a basic, but arduous task in the diagnostic pipeline. Our method uses state-of-the-art fully convolutional neural networks in conjunction with an adversarial critic model. It generalized well to CXR images of unseen datasets with different patient profiles, achieving a final DSC of 97.5% on the JSRT dataset. | 112 | COVID-19;Lung Cancer;Pneumonia;Tuberculosis | null | null | Art;Architecture;Lung Diseases | null | null | null | null | null | External | Segmentation-only | X-Ray |
2007.09695 | null | Yes | null | null | 2,020 | 2020-07-19 | Preprint | arXiv | 0 | using deep convolutional neural networks to diagnose covid-19 from chest x-ray images | The COVID-19 epidemic has become a major safety and health threat worldwide. Imaging diagnosis is one of the most effective ways to screen COVID-19. This project utilizes several open-source or public datasets to present an open-source dataset of COVID-19 CXRs, named COVID-19-CXR-Dataset, and introduces a deep convolutional neural network model. The model validates on 740 test images and achieves 87.3% accuracy, 89.67 % precision, and 84.46% recall, and correctly classifies 98 out of 100 COVID-19 x-ray images in test set with more than 81% prediction probability under the condition of 95% confidence interval. This project may serve as a reference for other researchers aiming to advance the development of deep learning applications in medical imaging. | 115 | COVID-19 | null | null | Research Personnel;Neural Networks | null | null | null | null | null | External | 2. Detection/Diagnosis | X-Ray |
32396075 | 10.1109/TMI.2020.2993291 | Yes | null | 32,396,075 | 2,020 | 2020-05-13 | Journal Article | Peer reviewed (PubMed) | 1 | deep learning covid-19 features on cxr using limited training data sets | Under the global pandemic of COVID-19, the use of artificial intelligence to analyze chest X-ray (CXR) image for COVID-19 diagnosis and patient triage is becoming important. Unfortunately, due to the emergent nature of the COVID-19 pandemic, a systematic collection of CXR data set for deep neural network training is difficult. To address this problem, here we propose a patch-based convolutional neural network approach with a relatively small number of trainable parameters for COVID-19 diagnosis. The proposed method is inspired by our statistical analysis of the potential imaging biomarkers of the CXR radiographs. Experimental results show that our method achieves state-of-the-art performance and provides clinically interpretable saliency maps, which are useful for COVID-19 diagnosis and patient triage. | 116 | COVID-19;COVID-19 Pandemic | 298 | IEEE Trans Med Imaging | Coronavirus Infections;Art;Algorithms;Map | 0.000007 | 174.592 | 0.00001 | 464 | 0 | External | 2. Detection/Diagnosis | X-Ray |
10.1101/2020.12.14.20248158 | 10.1101/2020.12.14.20248158 | Yes | null | null | 2,020 | 2020-12-16 | Preprint | medRxiv | 0 | transfer learning for covid-19 pneumonia detection and classification in chest x-ray images | We introduce a deep learning framework that can detect COVID-19 pneumonia in thoracic radiographs, as well as differentiate it from bacterial pneumonia infection. Deep classification models, such as convolutional neural networks (CNNs), require large-scale datasets in order to be trained and perform properly. Since the number of X-ray samples related to COVID-19 is limited, transfer learning (TL) appears as the go-to method to alleviate the demand for training data and develop accurate automated diagnosis models. In this context, networks are able to gain knowledge from pretrained networks on large-scale image datasets or alternative data-rich sources (i.e. bacterial and viral pneumonia radiographs). The experimental results indicate that the TL approach outperforms the performance obtained without TL, for the COVID-19 classification task in chest X-ray images. | 124 | COVID-19;Infections;Pneumonia;Pneumonia, Bacterial;Pneumonia, Viral | null | null | Transfer Learning;Other Topics | null | null | null | null | null | External | 2. Detection/Diagnosis | X-Ray |
32589673 | 10.1371/journal.pone.0235187 | Yes | PMC7319603 | 32,589,673 | 2,020 | 2020-06-27 | Journal Article;Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't | Peer reviewed (PubMed) | 1 | new machine learning method for image-based diagnosis of covid-19 | COVID-19 is a worldwide epidemic, as announced by the World Health Organization (WHO) in March 2020. Machine learning (ML) methods can play vital roles in identifying COVID-19 patients by visually analyzing their chest x-ray images. In this paper, a new ML-method proposed to classify the chest x-ray images into two classes, COVID-19 patient or non-COVID-19 person. The features extracted from the chest x-ray images using new Fractional Multichannel Exponent Moments (FrMEMs). A parallel multi-core computational framework utilized to accelerate the computational process. Then, a modified Manta-Ray Foraging Optimization based on differential evolution used to select the most significant features. The proposed method evaluated using two COVID-19 x-ray datasets. The proposed method achieved accuracy rates of 96.09% and 98.09% for the first and second datasets, respectively. | 125 | COVID-19 | 106 | PLoS One | Other Topics | 0.000005 | 71.36 | 0.000004 | 204 | 0 | External | 2. Detection/Diagnosis | X-Ray |
2012.15442 | null | Yes | null | null | 2,020 | 2020-12-30 | Preprint | arXiv | 0 | survey of the detection and classification of pulmonary lesions via ct and x-ray | In recent years, the prevalence of several pulmonary diseases, especially the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, has attracted worldwide attention. These diseases can be effectively diagnosed and treated with the help of lung imaging. With the development of deep learning technology and the emergence of many public medical image datasets, the diagnosis of lung diseases via medical imaging has been further improved. This article reviews pulmonary CT and X-ray image detection and classification in the last decade. It also provides an overview of the detection of lung nodules, pneumonia, and other common lung lesions based on the imaging characteristics of various lesions. Furthermore, this review introduces 26 commonly used public medical image datasets, summarizes the latest technology, and discusses current challenges and future research directions. | 125 | COVID-19;COVID-19 Pandemic;Lung Diseases;Pneumonia | null | null | Other Topics | null | null | null | null | null | N.A. | Review | Multimodal |
2010.04936 | null | Yes | null | null | 2,020 | 2020-10-10 | Preprint | arXiv | 0 | an empirical study on detecting covid-19 in chest x-ray images using deep learning based methods | Spreading of COVID-19 virus has increased the efforts to provide testing kits. Not only the preparation of these kits had been hard, rare, and expensive but also using them is another issue. Results have shown that these kits take some crucial time to recognize the virus, in addition to the fact that they encounter with 30% loss. In this paper, we have studied the usage of x-ray pictures which are ubiquitous, for the classification of COVID-19 chest Xray images, by the existing convolutional neural networks (CNNs). We intend to train chest x-rays of infected and not infected ones with different CNNs architectures including VGG19, Densnet-121, and Xception. Training these architectures resulted in different accuracies which were much faster and more precise than usual ways of testing. | 126 | COVID-19 | null | null | Other Topics | null | null | null | null | null | External | 2. Detection/Diagnosis | X-Ray |
33769939 | 10.1109/JBHI.2021.3069169 | Yes | PMC8545163 | 33,769,939 | 2,021 | 2021-03-27 | Journal Article | Peer reviewed (PubMed) | 1 | covid-19 in cxr: from detection and severity scoring to patient disease monitoring | This work estimates the severity of pneumonia in COVID-19 patients and reports the findings of a longitudinal study of disease progression. It presents a deep learning model for simultaneous detection and localization of pneumonia in chest Xray (CXR) images, which is shown to generalize to COVID-19 pneumonia. The localization maps are utilized to calculate a "Pneumonia Ratio" which indicates disease severity. The assessment of disease severity serves to build a temporal disease extent profile for hospitalized patients. To validate the model's applicability to the patient monitoring task, we developed a validation strategy which involves a synthesis of Digital Reconstructed Radiographs (DRRs - synthetic Xray) from serial CT scans; we then compared the disease progression profiles that were generated from the DRRs to those that were generated from CT volumes. | 129 | COVID-19;Disease Progression;Pneumonia | 23 | IEEE J Biomed Health Inform | Map;Cone-Beam Computed Tomography | 0.000001 | 20.76 | 0.000001 | 51 | 0 | External | 3. Monitoring/Severity assessment | X-Ray |
2004.02640 | null | Yes | null | null | 2,020 | 2020-04-06 | Preprint | arXiv | 0 | coronavirus detection and analysis on chest ct with deep learning | The outbreak of the novel coronavirus, officially declared a global pandemic, has a severe impact on our daily lives. As of this writing there are approximately 197,188 confirmed cases of which 80,881 are in "Mainland China" with 7,949 deaths, a mortality rate of 3.4%. In order to support radiologists in this overwhelming challenge, we develop a deep learning based algorithm that can detect, localize and quantify severity of COVID-19 manifestation from chest CT scans. The algorithm is comprised of a pipeline of image processing algorithms which includes lung segmentation, 2D slice classification and fine grain localization. In order to further understand the manifestations of the disease, we perform unsupervised clustering of abnormal slices. We present our results on a dataset comprised of 110 confirmed COVID-19 patients from Zhejiang province, China. | 130 | COVID-19;Death | null | null | Disease Outbreaks;Radiologists;Other Topics;Cluster Analysis | null | null | null | null | null | Self-recorded/clinical | 2. Detection/Diagnosis | CT |
10.1101/2020.05.10.20097063 | 10.1101/2020.05.10.20097063 | Yes | null | null | 2,020 | 2020-05-14 | Preprint | medRxiv | 0 | automatic detection of covid-19 infection from chest x-ray using deep learning | COVID-19 infection has created a panic across the globe in recent times. Early detection of COVID-19 infection can save many lives in the prevailing situation. This virus affects the respiratory system of a person and creates white patchy shadows in the lungs. Deep learning is one of the most effective Artificial Intelligence techniques to analyse chest X-ray images for efficient and reliable COVID-19 screening. In this paper, we have proposed a Deep Convolutional Neural Network method for fast and dependable identification of COVID-19 infection cases from the patient chest X-ray images. To validate the performance of the proposed system, chest X-ray images of more than 150 confirmed COVID-19 patients from the Kaggle data repository are used in the experimentation. The results show that the proposed system identifies the cases with an accuracy of 93%. | 134 | COVID-19;Infections | null | null | Other Topics | null | null | null | null | null | External | 2. Detection/Diagnosis | X-Ray |
34373554 | 10.1038/s41598-021-95680-6 | Yes | PMC8352869 | 34,373,554 | 2,021 | 2021-08-11 | Journal Article;Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't | Peer reviewed (PubMed) | 1 | explainable dcnn based chest x-ray image analysis and classification for covid-19 pneumonia detection | To speed up the discovery of COVID-19 disease mechanisms by X-ray images, this research developed a new diagnosis platform using a deep convolutional neural network (DCNN) that is able to assist radiologists with diagnosis by distinguishing COVID-19 pneumonia from non-COVID-19 pneumonia in patients based on chest X-ray classification and analysis. Such a tool can save time in interpreting chest X-rays and increase the accuracy and thereby enhance our medical capacity for the detection and diagnosis of COVID-19. The explainable method is also used in the DCNN to select instances of the X-ray dataset images to explain the behavior of training-learning models to achieve higher prediction accuracy. The average accuracy of our method is above 96%, which can replace manual reading and has the potential to be applied to large-scale rapid screening of COVID-9 for widely use cases. | 137 | COVID-19;Pneumonia | 9 | Sci Rep | Sensitivity and Specificity;Neural Networks | 0.000002 | 93.8 | 0.000006 | 205 | 0 | Self-recorded/clinical | 2. Detection/Diagnosis | X-Ray |
10.1101/2020.06.07.20124594 | 10.1101/2020.06.07.20124594 | Yes | null | null | 2,020 | 2020-06-08 | Preprint | medRxiv | 0 | early detection of coronavirus cases using chest x-ray images employing machine learning and deep learning approaches | This study aims to investigate if applying machine learning and deep learning approaches on chest X-ray images can detect cases of coronavirus. The chest X-ray datasets were obtained from Kaggle and Github and pre-processed into a single dataset using random sampling. We applied several machine learning and deep learning methods including Convolutional Neural Networks (CNN) along with classical machine learners. In deep learning procedure, several pre-trained models were also employed transfer learning in this dataset. Our proposed CNN model showed the highest accuracy , AUC , f-measure , sensitivity and specificity as well as the lowest fall out and miss rate respectively. We also evaluated specificity and fall out rate along with accuracy to identify non-COVID-19 individuals more accurately. As a result, our new models might help to early detect COVID-19 patients and prevent community transmission compared to traditional methods. | 140 | COVID-19 | null | null | Transfer Learning;Area under Curve | null | null | null | null | null | External | 2. Detection/Diagnosis | X-Ray |
32983909 | 10.1016/j.matpr.2020.09.352 | Yes | PMC7508494 | 32,983,909 | 2,020 | 2020-09-29 | Journal Article | Peer reviewed (PubMed) | 1 | machine learning and image analysis applications in the fight against covid-19 pandemic: datasets research directions challenges and opportunities | COVID-19 pandemic has become the most devastating disease of the current century and spread over 216 countries around the world. The disease is spreading through outbreaks despite the availability of modern sophisticated medical treatment. Machine Learning and Image Analysis research has been making great progress in many directions in the healthcare field for providing support to subsequent medical diagnosis. In this paper, we have propose three research directions with methodologies in the fight against the pandemic namely: Chest X-Ray (CXR) images classification using deep convolution neural networks with transfer learning to assist diagnosis; Patient Risk prediction of pandemic based on risk factors such as patient characteristics, comorbidities, initial symptoms, vital signs for prognosis of disease; and forecasting of disease spread and case fatality rate using deep neural networks. Further, some of the challenges, open datasets and opportunities are discussed for researchers. | 141 | COVID-19 Pandemic | 5 | Mater Today Proc | Health Care;Transfer Learning;Research Personnel;Disease Outbreaks;Risk Factors | 0.000002 | 36.208 | 0.000003 | 90 | 0 | N.A. | Review | X-Ray |
2004.12786 | null | Yes | null | null | 2,020 | 2020-04-30 | Preprint | arXiv | 0 | a cascaded learning strategy for robust covid-19 pneumonia chest x-ray screening | We introduce a comprehensive screening platform for the COVID-19 (a.k.a., SARS-CoV-2) pneumonia. The proposed AI-based system works on chest x-ray (CXR) images to predict whether a patient is infected with the COVID-19 disease. Although the recent international joint effort on making the availability of all sorts of open data, the public collection of CXR images is still relatively small for reliably training a deep neural network (DNN) to carry out COVID-19 prediction. To better address such inefficiency, we design a cascaded learning strategy to improve both the sensitivity and the specificity of the resulting DNN classification model. Our approach leverages a large CXR image dataset of non-COVID-19 pneumonia to generalize the original well-trained classification model via a cascaded learning scheme. The resulting screening system is shown to achieve good classification performance on the expanded dataset, including those newly added COVID-19 CXR images. | 142 | COVID-19;Pneumonia | null | null | Other Topics | null | null | null | null | null | External | 2. Detection/Diagnosis | X-Ray |
33972584 | 10.1038/s41598-021-88807-2 | Yes | PMC8110795 | 33,972,584 | 2,021 | 2021-05-12 | Journal Article;Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural;Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't | Peer reviewed (PubMed) | 1 | covid-classifier: an automated machine learning model to assist in the diagnosis of covid-19 infection in chest x-ray images | Chest-X ray (CXR) radiography can be used as a first-line triage process for non-COVID-19 patients with pneumonia. However, the similarity between features of CXR images of COVID-19 and pneumonia caused by other infections makes the differential diagnosis by radiologists challenging. We hypothesized that machine learning-based classifiers can reliably distinguish the CXR images of COVID-19 patients from other forms of pneumonia. We used a dimensionality reduction method to generate a set of optimal features of CXR images to build an efficient machine learning classifier that can distinguish COVID-19 cases from non-COVID-19 cases with high accuracy and sensitivity. By using global features of the whole CXR images, we successfully implemented our classifier using a relatively small dataset of CXR images. We propose that our COVID-Classifier can be used in conjunction with other tests for optimal allocation of hospital resources by rapid triage of non-COVID-19 cases. | 143 | COVID-19;Infections;Pneumonia | 56 | Sci Rep | Reproducibility of Results;ROC Curve | 0.000002 | 49.52 | 0.000003 | 112 | 0 | External | 2. Detection/Diagnosis | X-Ray |
2010.12967 | null | Yes | null | null | 2,020 | 2020-10-24 | Preprint | arXiv | 0 | automated triage of covid-19 from various lung abnormalities using chest ct features | The outbreak of COVID-19 has lead to a global effort to decelerate the pandemic spread. For this purpose chest computed-tomography (CT) based screening and diagnosis of COVID-19 suspected patients is utilized, either as a support or replacement to reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) test. In this paper, we propose a fully automated AI based system that takes as input chest CT scans and triages COVID-19 cases. More specifically, we produce multiple descriptive features, including lung and infections statistics, texture, shape and location, to train a machine learning based classifier that distinguishes between COVID-19 and other lung abnormalities (including community acquired pneumonia). We evaluated our system on a dataset of 2191 CT cases and demonstrated a robust solution with 90.8% sensitivity at 85.4% specificity with 94.0% ROC-AUC. In addition, we present an elaborated feature analysis and ablation study to explore the importance of each feature. | 144 | COVID-19;Infections;Pneumonia | null | null | Disease Outbreaks;Polymerase Chain Reaction;Area under Curve;Reverse Transcription | null | null | null | null | null | External | 2. Detection/Diagnosis | CT |
10.1101/2020.04.27.20081984 | 10.1101/2020.04.27.20081984 | Yes | null | null | 2,020 | 2020-05-03 | Preprint | medRxiv | 0 | distinguishing l and h phenotypes of covid-19 using a single x-ray image | Recent observations have shown that there are two types of COVID-19 response: an H phenotype with high lung elastance and weight, and an L phenotype with low measures1. H-type patients have pneumonia-like thickening of the lungs and require ventilation to survive; L-type patients have clearer lungs that may be injured by mechanical assistance2,3. As treatment protocols differ between the two types, and the number of ventilators is limited, it is vital to classify patients appropriately. To date, the only way to confirm phenotypes is through high-resolution computed tomography2. Here, we identify L- and H-type patients from their frontal chest x-rays using feature-embedded machine learning. We then apply the categorization to multiple images from the same patient, extending it to detect and monitor disease progression and recovery. The results give an immediate criterion for coronavirus triage and provide a methodology for respiratory diseases beyond COVID-19. | 144 | COVID-19;Disease Progression;Pneumonia;Respiratory Tract Diseases | null | null | Other Topics | null | null | null | null | null | External | 4. Prognosis/Treatment | X-Ray |
10.1101/2020.08.31.20175828 | 10.1101/2020.08.31.20175828 | Yes | null | null | 2,020 | 2020-09-02 | Preprint | medRxiv | 0 | covid-19 detection from chest x-ray images using deep learning and convolutional neural networks | Accurate and efficient diagnosis of potential COVID-19 patients is vital in the fight against the current pandemic. However, even the gold-standard COVID-19 test, reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction, suffers from a high false negative rate and a turnaround time of up to one week, preventing the infected from accessing the timely care they require, and impeding efforts to isolate positive cases. To address these shortcomings, this study develops a machine learning model based on the DenseNet-201 deep convolutional neural network, that can classify COVID-19 from chest radiographs in less than one minute and far more accurately than conventional tests (F1-score: 0.96; precision: 0.95; recall: 0.98). It uses a significantly larger dataset and more control classes than previously published models, demonstrating the promise of a machine learning approach for accurate and efficient COVID-19 screening. A live web application of the trained model can be accessed at /. | 146 | COVID-19 | null | null | Polymerase Chain Reaction;Reverse Transcription | null | null | null | null | null | External | 2. Detection/Diagnosis | X-Ray |
33100403 | 10.1016/j.patcog.2020.107700 | Yes | PMC7568501 | 33,100,403 | 2,020 | 2020-10-27 | Journal Article | Peer reviewed (PubMed) | 1 | metacovid: a siamese neural network framework with contrastive loss for n-shot diagnosis of covid-19 patients | Various AI functionalities such as pattern recognition and prediction can effectively be used to diagnose (recognize) and predict coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) infections and propose timely response (remedial action) to minimize the spread and impact of the virus. Motivated by this, an AI system based on deep meta learning has been proposed in this research to accelerate analysis of chest X-ray (CXR) images in automatic detection of COVID-19 cases. We present a synergistic approach to integrate contrastive learning with a fine-tuned pre-trained ConvNet encoder to capture unbiased feature representations and leverage a Siamese network for final classification of COVID-19 cases. We validate the effectiveness of our proposed model using two publicly available datasets comprising images from normal, COVID-19 and other pneumonia infected categories. Our model achieves 95.6% accuracy and AUC of 0.97 in diagnosing COVID-19 from CXR images even with a limited number of training samples. | 146 | COVID-19;Infections;Pneumonia | 57 | Pattern Recognit | Other Topics | 0.000003 | 54.8 | 0.000004 | 126 | 0 | External | 2. Detection/Diagnosis | X-Ray |
10.1101/2020.05.14.20101972 | 10.1101/2020.05.14.20101972 | Yes | null | null | 2,020 | 2020-10-06 | Preprint | medRxiv | 0 | integration of clinical characteristics lab tests and a deep learning ct scan analysis to predict severity of hospitalized covid-19 patients | The SARS-COV-2 pandemic has put pressure on Intensive Care Units, so that identifying predictors of disease severity is a priority. We collected 58 clinical and biological variables, chest CT scan data (506,341 images), and radiology reports from 1,003 coronavirus-infected patients from two French hospitals. We trained a deep learning model based on CT scans to predict severity; this model was more discriminative than a radiologist quantification of disease extent. We showed that neural network analysis of CT-scan brings unique prognosis information, although it is correlated with other markers of severity (oxygenation, LDH, and CRP). To provide a multimodal severity score, we developed AI-severity that includes 5 clinical and biological variables (age, sex, oxygenation, urea, platelet) as well as the CT deep learning model. When comparing AI-severity with 11 existing scores for severity, we find significantly improved prognosis performance; AI-severity can therefore rapidly become a reference scoring approach. | 147 | COVID-19 | null | null | Other Topics | null | null | null | null | null | Self-recorded/clinical | 3. Monitoring/Severity assessment | CT |
32604588 | 10.3233/SHTI200481 | Yes | null | 32,604,588 | 2,020 | 2020-07-02 | Journal Article | Peer reviewed (PubMed) | 1 | setting up an easy-to-use machine learning pipeline for medical decision support: a case study for covid-19 diagnosis based on deep learning with ct scans | Coronavirus disease (COVID-19) constitutes an ongoing global health problem with significant morbidity and mortality. It usually presents characteristic findings on a chest CT scan, which may lead to early detection of the disease. A timely and accurate diagnosis of COVID-19 is the cornerstone for the prompt management of the patients. The aim of the present study was to evaluate the performance of an automated machine learning algorithm in the diagnosis of Covid-19 pneumonia using chest CT scans. Diagnostic performance was assessed by the area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC), sensitivity, and positive predictive value. The method's average precision was 0.932. We suggest that auto-ML platforms help users with limited ML expertise train image recognition models by only uploading the examined dataset and performing some basic settings. Such methods could deliver significant potential benefits for patients in the future by allowing for earlier disease detection and care. | 148 | COVID-19;Pneumonia | 26 | Stud Health Technol Inform | Other Topics | 0.000005 | 86.376 | 0.000005 | 257 | 0 | External | 2. Detection/Diagnosis | CT |
35431611 | 10.1007/s11042-022-12156-z | Yes | PMC8989406 | 35,431,611 | 2,022 | 2022-04-19 | Journal Article | Peer reviewed (PubMed) | 1 | covid-cxnet: detecting covid-19 in frontal chest x-ray images using deep learning | One of the primary clinical observations for screening the novel coronavirus is capturing a chest x-ray image. In most patients, a chest x-ray contains abnormalities, such as consolidation, resulting from COVID-19 viral pneumonia. In this study, research is conducted on efficiently detecting imaging features of this type of pneumonia using deep convolutional neural networks in a large dataset. It is demonstrated that simple models, alongside the majority of pretrained networks in the literature, focus on irrelevant features for decision-making. In this paper, numerous chest x-ray images from several sources are collected, and one of the largest publicly accessible datasets is prepared. Finally, using the transfer learning paradigm, the well-known CheXNet model is utilized to develop COVID-CXNet. This powerful model is capable of detecting the novel coronavirus pneumonia based on relevant and meaningful features with precise localization. COVID-CXNet is a step towards a fully automated and robust COVID-19 detection system. | 149 | COVID-19;Pneumonia;Pneumonia, Viral | 42 | Multimed Tools Appl | Transfer Learning;Other Topics | 0.000001 | 22.6 | 0.000002 | 35 | 0 | External | 2. Detection/Diagnosis | X-Ray |
32796848 | 10.1038/s41467-020-17971-2 | Yes | PMC7429815 | 32,796,848 | 2,020 | 2020-08-17 | Journal Article;Research Support, N.I.H., Intramural;Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't | Peer reviewed (PubMed) | 1 | artificial intelligence for the detection of covid-19 pneumonia on chest ct using multinational datasets | Chest CT is emerging as a valuable diagnostic tool for clinical management of COVID-19 associated lung disease. Artificial intelligence (AI) has the potential to aid in rapid evaluation of CT scans for differentiation of COVID-19 findings from other clinical entities. Here we show that a series of deep learning algorithms, trained in a diverse multinational cohort of 1280 patients to localize parietal pleura/lung parenchyma followed by classification of COVID-19 pneumonia, can achieve up to 90.8% accuracy, with 84% sensitivity and 93% specificity, as evaluated in an independent test set (not included in training and validation) of 1337 patients. Normal controls included chest CTs from oncology, emergency, and pneumonia-related indications. The false positive rate in 140 patients with laboratory confirmed other (non COVID-19) pneumonias was 10%. AI-based algorithms can readily identify CT scans with COVID-19 associated pneumonia, as well as distinguish non-COVID related pneumonias with high specificity in diverse patient populations. | 150 | COVID-19;Lung Diseases;Pneumonia | 211 | Nat Commun | Coronavirus Infections;COVID-19 Testing | 0.000006 | 139.128 | 0.000008 | 369 | 0 | Self-recorded/clinical | 2. Detection/Diagnosis | CT |
32959234 | 10.1007/s12539-020-00393-5 | Yes | PMC7505483 | 32,959,234 | 2,020 | 2020-09-23 | Journal Article | Peer reviewed (PubMed) | 1 | covid19xraynet: a two-step transfer learning model for the covid-19 detecting problem based on a limited number of chest x-ray images | The novel coronavirus severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) has caused a major pandemic outbreak recently. Various diagnostic technologies have been under active development. The novel coronavirus disease (COVID-19) may induce pulmonary failures, and chest X-ray imaging becomes one of the major confirmed diagnostic technologies. The very limited number of publicly available samples has rendered the training of the deep neural networks unstable and inaccurate. This study proposed a two-step transfer learning pipeline and a deep residual network framework COVID19XrayNet for the COVID-19 detection problem based on chest X-ray images. COVID19XrayNet firstly tunes the transferred model on a large dataset of chest X-ray images, which is further tuned using a small dataset of annotated chest X-ray images. The final model achieved 0.9108 accuracy. The experimental data also suggested that the model may be improved with more training samples being released. COVID19XrayNet, a two-step transfer learning framework designed for biomedical images. | 151 | COVID-19;Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome | 18 | Interdiscip Sci | Radiography;Coronavirus Infections;Transfer Learning;Algorithms;Disease Outbreaks;COVID-19 Testing;Lung;Neural Networks;Tomography | 0.00001 | 298.336 | 0.000016 | 764 | 0 | External | 2. Detection/Diagnosis | X-Ray |
32356760 | 10.1109/RBME.2020.2990959 | Yes | null | 32,356,760 | 2,020 | 2020-05-02 | Journal Article;Review | Peer reviewed (PubMed) | 1 | the role of imaging in the detection and management of covid-19: a review | Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) caused by the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) is spreading rapidly around the world, resulting in a massive death toll. Lung infection or pneumonia is the common complication of COVID-19, and imaging techniques, especially computed tomography (CT), have played an important role in diagnosis and treatment assessment of the disease. Herein, we review the imaging characteristics and computing models that have been applied for the management of COVID-19. CT, positron emission tomography - CT (PET/CT), lung ultrasound, and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) have been used for detection, treatment, and follow-up. The quantitative analysis of imaging data using artificial intelligence (AI) is also explored. Our findings indicate that typical imaging characteristics and their changes can play crucial roles in the detection and management of COVID-19. In addition, AI or other quantitative image analysis methods are urgently needed to maximize the value of imaging in the management of COVID-19. | 153 | COVID-19;Death;Infections;Pneumonia;Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome | 130 | IEEE Rev Biomed Eng | Magnetic Resonance Imaging;Pneumonia;Lung;Ultrasonography;Tomography;Review | 0.000002 | 77.88 | 0.000004 | 173 | 0 | External | Review | Multimodal |
32536759 | 10.1016/j.chaos.2020.109944 | Yes | PMC7254021 | 32,536,759 | 2,020 | 2020-06-17 | Journal Article | Peer reviewed (PubMed) | 1 | application of deep learning for fast detection of covid-19 in x-rays using ncovnet | Presently, COVID-19 has posed a serious threat to researchers, scientists, health professionals, and administrations around the globe from its detection to its treatment. The whole world is witnessing a lockdown like situation because of COVID-19 pandemic. Persistent efforts are being made by the researchers to obtain the possible solutions to control this pandemic in their respective areas. One of the most common and effective methods applied by the researchers is the use of CT-Scans and X-rays to analyze the images of lungs for COVID-19. However, it requires several radiology specialists and time to manually inspect each report which is one of the challenging tasks in a pandemic. In this paper, we have proposed a deep learning neural network-based method nCOVnet, an alternative fast screening method that can be used for detecting the COVID-19 by analyzing the X-rays of patients which will look for visual indicators found in the chest radiography imaging of COVID-19 patients. | 154 | COVID-19;COVID-19 Pandemic | 192 | Chaos Solitons Fractals | Other Topics | 0.000004 | 88.88 | 0.000006 | 210 | 0 | External | 2. Detection/Diagnosis | X-Ray |
32834523 | 10.1007/s00138-020-01101-5 | Yes | PMC7386599 | 32,834,523 | 2,020 | 2020-08-25 | Journal Article | Peer reviewed (PubMed) | 1 | deep learning applications in pulmonary medical imaging: recent updates and insights on covid-19 | Shortly after deep learning algorithms were applied to Image Analysis, and more importantly to medical imaging, their applications increased significantly to become a trend. Likewise, deep learning applications (DL) on pulmonary medical images emerged to achieve remarkable advances leading to promising clinical trials. Yet, coronavirus can be the real trigger to open the route for fast integration of DL in hospitals and medical centers. This paper reviews the development of deep learning applications in medical image analysis targeting pulmonary imaging and giving insights of contributions to COVID-19. It covers more than 160 contributions and surveys in this field, all issued between February 2017 and May 2020 inclusively, highlighting various deep learning tasks such as classification, segmentation, and detection, as well as different pulmonary pathologies like airway diseases, lung cancer, COVID-19 and other infections. It summarizes and discusses the current state-of-the-art approaches in this research domain, highlighting the challenges, especially with COVID-19 pandemic current situation. | 154 | COVID-19;COVID-19 Pandemic;Cancer;Infections;Lung Diseases | 20 | Mach Vis Appl | Coronavirus Infections;Art;Algorithms;Lung Diseases | 0.000003 | 14.632 | 0.000002 | 39 | 0 | N.A. | Review | Multimodal |
10.1101/2020.04.13.20063479 | 10.1101/2020.04.13.20063479 | Yes | null | null | 2,020 | 2020-04-17 | Preprint | medRxiv | 0 | machine learning analysis of chest ct scan images as a complementary digital test of coronavirus (covid-19) patients | This paper reports on the development and performance of machine learning schemes for the analysis of Chest CT Scan images of Coronavirus COVID-19 patients and demonstrates significant success in efficiently and automatically testing for COVID-19 infection. In particular, an innovative frequency domain algorithm, to be called FFT-Gabor scheme, will be shown to predict in almost real-time the state of the patient with an average accuracy of 95.37%, sensitivity 95.99% and specificity 94.76%. The FFT-Gabor scheme is adequately informative in that clinicians can visually examine the FFT-Gabor feature to support their final diagnostic.The proposed FFT-Gabor scheme is an automatic machine learning scheme that works in real time and achieves significantly high accuracy with very low false negative, and can provide supporting evidences of the predicted decision by visually displaying the final features upon which decision is made. This scheme will be most beneficial when used in addition to the RT-PCR swab test of non-symptomatic cases. | 154 | COVID-19;Infections | null | null | Coronavirus Infections;Polymerase Chain Reaction | null | null | null | null | null | External | 2. Detection/Diagnosis | CT |
10.1101/2020.10.13.20178483 | 10.1101/2020.10.13.20178483 | Yes | null | null | 2,020 | 2020-10-14 | Preprint | medRxiv | 0 | automated chest radiograph diagnosis: a twofer for tuberculosis and covid-19 | Coronavirus disease (Covid 19) and Tuberculosis (TB) are two challenges the world is facing. TB is a pandemic which has challenged mankind for ages and Covid 19 is a recent onset fast spreading pandemic. We study these two conditions with focus on Artificial Intelligence (AI) based imaging, the role of digital chest x-ray and utility of end to end platform to improve turnaround times. Using artificial intelligence assisted technology for triage and creation of structured radiology reports using an end to end platform can ensure quick diagnosis. Changing dynamics of TB screening in the times of Covid 19 pandemic have resulted in bottlenecks for TB diagnosis. The paper tries to outline two types of use cases, one is COVID-19 screening in a hospital-based scenario and the other is TB screening project in mobile van setting and discusses the learning of these models which have both used AI for prescreening and generating structured radiology reports. | 154 | COVID-19;COVID-19 Pandemic;Tuberculosis | null | null | Other Topics | null | null | null | null | null | Self-recorded/clinical | 2. Detection/Diagnosis | X-Ray |
10.1101/2020.05.01.20088211 | 10.1101/2020.05.01.20088211 | Yes | null | null | 2,020 | 2020-06-18 | Preprint | medRxiv | 0 | classification of covid-19 from chest x-ray images using deep convolutional neural networks | The COVID-19 pandemic continues to have a devastating effect on the health and well-being of the global population. A vital step in the combat towards COVID-19 is a successful screening of contaminated patients, with one of the key screening approaches being radiological imaging using chest radiography. This study aimed to automatically detect COVID‐ 19 pneumonia patients using digital chest x‐ ray images while maximizing the accuracy in detection using deep convolutional neural networks (DCNN). The dataset consists of 864 COVID‐ 19, 1345 viral pneumonia and 1341 normal chest x‐ ray images. In this study, DCNN based model Inception V3 with transfer learning have been proposed for the detection of coronavirus pneumonia infected patients using chest X-ray radiographs and gives a classification accuracy of more than 98% (training accuracy of 97% and validation accuracy of 93%). The results demonstrate that transfer learning proved to be effective, showed robust performance and easily deployable approach for COVID-19 detection. | 155 | COVID-19;COVID-19 Pandemic;Pneumonia;Pneumonia, Viral | null | null | Transfer Learning;Other Topics | null | null | null | null | null | External | 2. Detection/Diagnosis | Multimodal |
2004.03747 | null | Yes | null | null | 2,020 | 2020-04-18 | Preprint | arXiv | 0 | covid_mtnet: covid-19 detection with multi-task deep learning approaches | COVID-19 is currently one the most life-threatening problems around the world. The fast and accurate detection of the COVID-19 infection is essential to identify, take better decisions and ensure treatment for the patients which will help save their lives. In this paper, we propose a fast and efficient way to identify COVID-19 patients with multi-task deep learning (DL) methods. Both X-ray and CT scan images are considered to evaluate the proposed technique. We employ our Inception Residual Recurrent Convolutional Neural Network with Transfer Learning (TL) approach for COVID-19 detection and our NABLA-N network model for segmenting the regions infected by COVID-19. The detection model shows around 84.67% testing accuracy from X-ray images and 98.78% accuracy in CT-images. A novel quantitative analysis strategy is also proposed in this paper to determine the percentage of infected regions in X-ray and CT images. The qualitative and quantitative results demonstrate promising results for COVID-19 detection and infected region localization. | 155 | COVID-19;Infections | null | null | Transfer Learning;Other Topics | null | null | null | null | null | External | 2. Detection/Diagnosis | Multimodal |
2007.14318 | null | Yes | null | null | 2,020 | 2020-08-29 | Preprint | arXiv | 0 | covmunet: a multiple loss approach towards detection of covid-19 from chest x-ray | The recent outbreak of COVID-19 has halted the whole world, bringing a devastating effect on public health, global economy, and educational systems. As the vaccine of the virus is still not available, the most effective way to combat the virus is testing and social distancing. Among all other detection techniques, the Chest X-ray (CXR) based method can be a good solution for its simplicity, rapidity, cost, efficiency, and accessibility. In this paper, we propose CovMUNET, which is a multiple loss deep neural network approach to detect COVID-19 cases from CXR images. Extensive experiments are performed to ensure the robustness of the proposed algorithm and the performance is evaluated in terms of precision, recall, accuracy, and F1-score. The proposed method outperforms the state-of-the-art approaches with an accuracy of 96.97% for 3-class classification (COVID-19 vs normal vs pneumonia) and 99.41% for 2-class classification (COVID vs non-COVID). The proposed neural architecture also successfully detects the abnormality in CXR images. | 156 | COVID-19;Pneumonia | null | null | Public Health;Art;Algorithms;Architecture;Disease Outbreaks | null | null | null | null | null | External | 2. Detection/Diagnosis | X-Ray |
33208927 | 10.1038/s41551-020-00633-5 | Yes | PMC7723858 | 33,208,927 | 2,020 | 2020-11-20 | Journal Article;Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't | Peer reviewed (PubMed) | 1 | open resource of clinical data from patients with pneumonia for the prediction of covid-19 outcomes via deep learning | Data from patients with coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) are essential for guiding clinical decision making, for furthering the understanding of this viral disease, and for diagnostic modelling. Here, we describe an open resource containing data from 1,521 patients with pneumonia (including COVID-19 pneumonia) consisting of chest computed tomography (CT) images, 130 clinical features (from a range of biochemical and cellular analyses of blood and urine samples) and laboratory-confirmed severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) clinical status. We show the utility of the database for prediction of COVID-19 morbidity and mortality outcomes using a deep learning algorithm trained with data from 1,170 patients and 19,685 manually labelled CT slices. In an independent validation cohort of 351 patients, the algorithm discriminated between negative, mild and severe cases with areas under the receiver operating characteristic curve of 0.944, 0.860 and 0.884, respectively. The open database may have further uses in the diagnosis and management of patients with COVID-19. | 156 | COVID-19;Pneumonia;Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome;Virus Diseases | 64 | Nat Biomed Eng | Algorithms;ROC Curve | 0.000003 | 45.216 | 0.000003 | 140 | 0 | Self-recorded/clinical | 4. Prognosis/Treatment | CT |
32742318 | 10.3892/etm.2020.8797 | Yes | PMC7388253 | 32,742,318 | 2,020 | 2020-08-04 | Journal Article | Peer reviewed (PubMed) | 1 | interpretable artificial intelligence framework for covid-19 screening on chest x-rays | COVID-19 has led to an unprecedented healthcare crisis with millions of infected people across the globe often pushing infrastructures, healthcare workers and entire economies beyond their limits. The scarcity of testing kits, even in developed countries, has led to extensive research efforts towards alternative solutions with high sensitivity. Chest radiological imaging paired with artificial intelligence (AI) can offer significant advantages in diagnosis of novel coronavirus infected patients. To this end, transfer learning techniques are used for overcoming the limitations emanating from the lack of relevant big datasets, enabling specialized models to converge on limited data, as in the case of X-rays of COVID-19 patients. In this study, we present an interpretable AI framework assessed by expert radiologists on the basis on how well the attention maps focus on the diagnostically-relevant image regions. The proposed transfer learning methodology achieves an overall area under the curve of 1 for a binary classification problem across a 5-fold training/testing dataset. | 156 | COVID-19 | 45 | Exp Ther Med | Health Care;Transfer Learning;Research Personnel;Health;Map | 0.000002 | 22.032 | 0.000002 | 62 | 0 | External | 2. Detection/Diagnosis | X-Ray |
10.1101/2020.07.08.20149161 | 10.1101/2020.07.08.20149161 | Yes | null | null | 2,020 | 2020-07-10 | Preprint | medRxiv | 0 | covidpen: a novel covid-19 detection model using chest x-rays and ct scans | The trending global pandemic of COVID-19 is the fastest ever impact which caused people worldwide by severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS)-driven coronavirus. However, several countries suffer from the shortage of test kits and high false negative rate in PCR test. Enhancing the chest X-ray or CT detection rate becomes critical. The patient triage is of utmost importance and the use of machine learning can drive the diagnosis of chest X-ray or CT image by identifying COVID-19 cases. To tackle this problem, we propose COVIDPEN - a transfer learning approach on Pruned EfficientNet-based model for the detection of COVID-19 cases. The proposed model is further interpolated by post-hoc analysis for the explainability of the predictions. The effectiveness of our proposed model is demonstrated on two systematic datasets of chest radiographs and computed tomography scans. Experimental results with several baseline comparisons show that our method is on par and confers clinically explicable instances, which are meant for healthcare providers. | 157 | COVID-19;Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome | null | null | Transfer Learning;Polymerase Chain Reaction;Tomography;Other Topics | null | null | null | null | null | External | 2. Detection/Diagnosis | Multimodal |
33643491 | 10.1007/s13278-021-00731-5 | Yes | PMC7903408 | 33,643,491 | 2,021 | 2021-03-02 | Journal Article | Peer reviewed (PubMed) | 1 | synthesis of covid-19 chest x-rays using unpaired image-to-image translation | Motivated by the lack of publicly available datasets of chest radiographs of positive patients with coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), we build the first-of-its-kind open dataset of synthetic COVID-19 chest X-ray images of high fidelity using an unsupervised domain adaptation approach by leveraging class conditioning and adversarial training. Our contributions are twofold. First, we show considerable performance improvements on COVID-19 detection using various deep learning architectures when employing synthetic images as additional training set. Second, we show how our image synthesis method can serve as a data anonymization tool by achieving comparable detection performance when trained only on synthetic data. In addition, the proposed data generation framework offers a viable solution to the COVID-19 detection in particular, and to medical image classification tasks in general. Our publicly available benchmark dataset (GitHub) consists of 21,295 synthetic COVID-19 chest X-ray images. The insights gleaned from this dataset can be used for preventive actions in the fight against the COVID-19 pandemic. | 157 | COVID-19;COVID-19 Pandemic | 13 | Soc Netw Anal Min | X-Rays;Translations | 0.000001 | 24.6 | 0.000002 | 55 | 0 | External | 5. Post-hoc | X-Ray |
2004.05436 | null | Yes | null | null | 2,020 | 2020-04-11 | Preprint | arXiv | 0 | detection of covid-19 from chest x-ray images using artificial intelligence: an early review | In 2019, the entire world is facing a situation of health emergency due to a newly emerged coronavirus (COVID-19). Almost 196 countries are affected by covid-19, while USA, Italy, China, Spain, Iran, and France have the maximum active cases of COVID-19. The issues, medical and healthcare departments are facing in delay of detecting the COVID-19. Several artificial intelligence based system are designed for the automatic detection of COVID-19 using chest x-rays. In this article we will discuss the different approaches used for the detection of COVID-19 and the challenges we are facing. It is mandatory to develop an automatic detection system to prevent the transfer of the virus through contact. Several deep learning architecture are deployed for the detection of COVID-19 such as ResNet, Inception, Googlenet etc. All these approaches are detecting the subjects suffering with pneumonia while its hard to decide whether the pneumonia is caused by COVID-19 or due to any other bacterial or fungal attack. | 158 | COVID-19;Pneumonia | null | null | Health Care;Other Topics | null | null | null | null | null | External | Review | X-Ray |
32501424 | 10.1016/j.imu.2020.100360 | Yes | PMC7255267 | 32,501,424 | 2,020 | 2020-06-06 | Journal Article | Peer reviewed (PubMed) | 1 | a modified deep convolutional neural network for detecting covid-19 and pneumonia from chest x-ray images based on the concatenation of xception and resnet50v2 | In this paper, we have trained several deep convolutional networks with introduced training techniques for classifying X-ray images into three classes: normal, pneumonia, and COVID-19, based on two open-source datasets. Our data contains 180 X-ray images that belong to persons infected with COVID-19, and we attempted to apply methods to achieve the best possible results. In this research, we introduce some training techniques that help the network learn better when we have an unbalanced dataset (fewer cases of COVID-19 along with more cases from other classes). We also propose a neural network that is a concatenation of the Xception and ResNet50V2 networks. This network achieved the best accuracy by utilizing multiple features extracted by two robust networks. For evaluating our network, we have tested it on 11302 images to report the actual accuracy achievable in real circumstances. The average accuracy of the proposed network for detecting COVID-19 cases is 99.50%, and the overall average accuracy for all classes is 91.4%. | 160 | COVID-19;Pneumonia | 162 | Inform Med Unlocked | Transfer Learning;Other Topics | 0.000007 | 138.352 | 0.000009 | 342 | 0 | External | 2. Detection/Diagnosis | X-Ray |
33961635 | 10.1371/journal.pone.0250952 | Yes | PMC8104381 | 33,961,635 | 2,021 | 2021-05-08 | Journal Article | Peer reviewed (PubMed) | 1 | ai-corona: radiologist-assistant deep learning framework for covid-19 diagnosis in chest ct scans | The development of medical assisting tools based on artificial intelligence advances is essential in the global fight against COVID-19 outbreak and the future of medical systems. In this study, we introduce ai-corona, a radiologist-assistant deep learning framework for COVID-19 infection diagnosis using chest CT scans. Our framework incorporates an EfficientNetB3-based feature extractor. We employed three datasets; the CC-CCII set, the MasihDaneshvari Hospital (MDH) cohort, and the MosMedData cohort. Overall, these datasets constitute 7184 scans from 5693 subjects and include the COVID-19, non-COVID abnormal (NCA), common pneumonia (CP), non-pneumonia, and Normal classes. We evaluate ai-corona on test sets from the CC-CCII set, MDH cohort, and the entirety of the MosMedData cohort, for which it gained AUC scores of 0.997, 0.989, and 0.954, respectively. Our results indicates ai-corona outperforms all the alternative models. Lastly, our framework's diagnosis capabilities were evaluated as assistant to several experts. Accordingly, We observed an increase in both speed and accuracy of expert diagnosis when incorporating ai-corona's assistance. | 160 | COVID-19;Infections;Pneumonia | 23 | PLoS One | Disease Outbreaks;Polymerase Chain Reaction;Radiologists;Other Topics;ROC Curve;Area under Curve | 0.000001 | 35.68 | 0.000002 | 82 | 0 | Self-recorded/clinical | 2. Detection/Diagnosis | CT |
33014121 | 10.1155/2020/9756518 | Yes | PMC7519983 | 33,014,121 | 2,020 | 2020-10-06 | Journal Article;Review | Peer reviewed (PubMed) | 1 | review on diagnosis of covid-19 from chest ct images using artificial intelligence | The COVID-19 diagnostic approach is mainly divided into two broad categories, a laboratory-based and chest radiography approach. The last few months have witnessed a rapid increase in the number of studies use artificial intelligence (AI) techniques to diagnose COVID-19 with chest computed tomography (CT). In this study, we review the diagnosis of COVID-19 by using chest CT toward AI. We searched ArXiv, MedRxiv, and Google Scholar using the terms "deep learning", "neural networks", "COVID-19", and "chest CT". At the time of writing (August 24, 2020), there have been nearly 100 studies and 30 studies among them were selected for this review. We categorized the studies based on the classification tasks: COVID-19/normal, COVID-19/non-COVID-19, COVID-19/non-COVID-19 pneumonia, and severity. The sensitivity, specificity, precision, accuracy, area under the curve, and F1 score results were reported as high as 100%, 100%, 99.62, 99.87%, 100%, and 99.5%, respectively. However, the presented results should be carefully compared due to the different degrees of difficulty of different classification tasks. | 161 | COVID-19;Pneumonia | 74 | Comput Math Methods Med | Radiography;Coronavirus Infections;COVID-19 Testing;Sensitivity and Specificity;Neural Networks | 0.000006 | 131.504 | 0.000007 | 392 | 0 | N.A. | Review | CT |
2007.05592 | null | Yes | null | null | 2,020 | 2020-07-05 | Preprint | arXiv | 0 | experiments of federated learning for covid-19 chest x-ray images | AI plays an important role in COVID-19 identification. Computer vision and deep learning techniques can assist in determining COVID-19 infection with Chest X-ray Images. However, for the protection and respect of the privacy of patients, the hospital's specific medical-related data did not allow leakage and sharing without permission. Collecting such training data was a major challenge. To a certain extent, this has caused a lack of sufficient data samples when performing deep learning approaches to detect COVID-19. Federated Learning is an available way to address this issue. It can effectively address the issue of data silos and get a shared model without obtaining local data. In the work, we propose the use of federated learning for COVID-19 data training and deploy experiments to verify the effectiveness. And we also compare performances of four popular models (MobileNet, ResNet18, MoblieNet, and COVID-Net) with the federated learning framework and without the framework. This work aims to inspire more researches on federated learning about COVID-19. | 161 | COVID-19;Infections | null | null | Other Topics | null | null | null | null | null | External | 2. Detection/Diagnosis | X-Ray |
2008.02866 | null | Yes | null | null | 2,020 | 2020-08-15 | Preprint | arXiv | 0 | improving explainability of image classification in scenarios with class overlap: application to covid-19 and pneumonia | Trust in predictions made by machine learning models is increased if the model generalizes well on previously unseen samples and when inference is accompanied by cogent explanations of the reasoning behind predictions. In the image classification domain, generalization can be assessed through accuracy, sensitivity, and specificity. Explainability can be assessed by how well the model localizes the object of interest within an image. However, both generalization and explainability through localization are degraded in scenarios with significant overlap between classes. We propose a method based on binary expert networks that enhances the explainability of image classifications through better localization by mitigating the model uncertainty induced by class overlap. Our technique performs discriminative localization on images that contain features with significant class overlap, without explicitly training for localization. Our method is particularly promising in real-world class overlap scenarios, such as COVID-19 and pneumonia, where expertly labeled data for localization is not readily available. This can be useful for early, rapid, and trustworthy screening for COVID-19. | 163 | COVID-19;Pneumonia | null | null | Other Topics | null | null | null | null | null | External | 5. Post-hoc | X-Ray |
33967656 | 10.1016/j.inffus.2021.04.008 | Yes | PMC8086233 | 33,967,656 | 2,021 | 2021-05-11 | Journal Article | Peer reviewed (PubMed) | 1 | a critic evaluation of methods for covid-19 automatic detection from x-ray images | In this paper, we compare and evaluate different testing protocols used for automatic COVID-19 diagnosis from X-Ray images in the recent literature. We show that similar results can be obtained using X-Ray images that do not contain most of the lungs. We are able to remove the lungs from the images by turning to black the center of the X-Ray scan and training our classifiers only on the outer part of the images. Hence, we deduce that several testing protocols for the recognition are not fair and that the neural networks are learning patterns in the dataset that are not correlated to the presence of COVID-19. Finally, we show that creating a fair testing protocol is a challenging task, and we provide a method to measure how fair a specific testing protocol is. In the future research we suggest to check the fairness of a testing protocol using our tools and we encourage researchers to look for better techniques than the ones that we propose. | 165 | COVID-19 | 63 | Inf Fusion | Black Americans;Research Personnel;Techniques;X-Rays;Dataset;Paper | 0.000002 | 46.68 | 0.000003 | 107 | 0 | External | 2. Detection/Diagnosis | X-Ray |
10.1101/2020.05.06.20092874 | 10.1101/2020.05.06.20092874 | Yes | null | null | 2,020 | 2020-05-08 | Preprint | medRxiv | 0 | prognet: covid-19 prognosis using recurrent and convolutional neural networks | , Humanity is facing nowadays a dramatic pandemic episode with the Coronavirus propagation over all continents. The Covid-19 disease is still not well characterized, and many research teams all over the world are working on either therapeutic or vaccination issues. Massive testing is one of the main recommendations. In addition to laboratory tests, imagery-based tools are being widely investigated. Artificial intelligence is therefore contributing to the efforts made to face this pandemic phase. Regarding patients in hospitals, it is important to monitor the evolution of lung pathologies due to the virus. A prognosis is therefore of great interest for doctors to adapt their care strategy. In this paper, we propose a method for Covid-19 prognosis based on deep learning architectures. The proposed method is based on the combination of a convolutional and recurrent neural networks to classify multi-temporal chest X-ray images and predict the evolution of the observed lung pathology. When applied to radiological time-series, promising results are obtained with an accuracy rates higher than 92%. | 166 | COVID-19 | null | null | Other Topics | null | null | null | null | null | External | 4. Prognosis/Treatment | X-Ray |
10.1101/2020.11.08.20227819 | 10.1101/2020.11.08.20227819 | Yes | null | null | 2,020 | 2020-11-12 | Preprint | medRxiv | 0 | detection of covid-19 disease from chest x-ray images: a deep transfer learning framework | World economy as well as public health have been facing a devastating effect caused by the disease termed as Coronavirus (COVID-19). A significant step of COVID-19 affected patient’s treatment is the faster and accurate detection of the disease which is the motivation of this study. In this paper, implementation of a deep transfer learning-based framework using a pre-trained network (ResNet-50) for detecting COVID-19 from the chest X-rays was done. Our dataset consists of 2905 chest X-ray images of three categories: COVID-19 affected (219 cases), Viral Pneumonia affected (1345 cases), and Normal Chest X-rays (1341 cases). The implemented neural network demonstrates significant performance in classifying the cases with an overall accuracy of 96%. Most importantly, the model has shown a significantly good performance over the current research-based methods in detecting the COVID-19 cases in the test dataset (Precision = 1.00, Recall = 1.00, F1-score = 1.00 and Specificity = 1.00). Therefore, our proposed approach can be adapted as a reliable method for faster and accurate COVID-19 affected case detection. | 168 | COVID-19;Pneumonia, Viral | null | null | Public Health;Transfer Learning | null | null | null | null | null | External | 2. Detection/Diagnosis | X-Ray |
2004.09750 | null | Yes | null | null | 2,021 | 2021-03-21 | Preprint | arXiv | 0 | miniseg: an extremely minimum network for efficient covid-19 segmentation | The rapid spread of the new pandemic, i.e., COVID-19, has severely threatened global health. Deep-learning-based computer-aided screening, e.g., COVID-19 infected CT area segmentation, has attracted much attention. However, the publicly available COVID-19 training data are limited, easily causing overfitting for traditional deep learning methods that are usually data-hungry with millions of parameters. On the other hand, fast training/testing and low computational cost are also necessary for quick deployment and development of COVID-19 screening systems, but traditional deep learning methods are usually computationally intensive. To address the above problems, we propose MiniSeg, a lightweight deep learning model for efficient COVID-19 segmentation. Compared with traditional segmentation methods, MiniSeg has several significant strengths: i) it only has 83K parameters and is thus not easy to overfit; ii) it has high computational efficiency and is thus convenient for practical deployment; iii) it can be fast retrained by other users using their private COVID-19 data for further improving performance. In addition, we build a comprehensive COVID-19 segmentation benchmark for comparing MiniSeg to traditional methods. | 169 | COVID-19 | null | null | Other Topics | null | null | null | null | null | External | Segmentation-only | CT |
32700269 | 10.1007/s11356-020-10133-3 | Yes | PMC7375456 | 32,700,269 | 2,020 | 2020-07-24 | Journal Article | Peer reviewed (PubMed) | 1 | drawing insights from covid-19-infected patients using ct scan images and machine learning techniques: a study on 200 patients | As the whole world is witnessing what novel coronavirus (COVID-19) can do to the mankind, it presents several unique features also. In the absence of specific vaccine for COVID-19, it is essential to detect the disease at an early stage and isolate an infected patient. Till today there is a global shortage of testing labs and testing kits for COVID-19. This paper discusses about the role of machine learning techniques for getting important insights like whether lung computed tomography (CT) scan should be the first screening/alternative test for real-time reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR), is COVID-19 pneumonia different from other viral pneumonia and if yes how to distinguish it using lung CT scan images from the carefully selected data of lung CT scan COVID-19-infected patients from the hospitals of Italy, China, Moscow and India? For training and testing the proposed system, custom vision software of Microsoft azure based on machine learning techniques is used. An overall accuracy of almost 91% is achieved for COVID-19 classification using the proposed methodology. | 169 | COVID-19;Pneumonia;Pneumonia, Viral | 34 | Environ Sci Pollut Res Int | Coronavirus Infections;Polymerase Chain Reaction | 0.000003 | 44.368 | 0.000003 | 142 | 0 | External | 2. Detection/Diagnosis | CT |
33169050 | 10.1007/s00138-020-01128-8 | Yes | PMC7609373 | 33,169,050 | 2,020 | 2020-11-11 | Journal Article | Peer reviewed (PubMed) | 1 | a five-layer deep convolutional neural network with stochastic pooling for chest ct-based covid-19 diagnosis | Till August 17, 2020, COVID-19 has caused 21.59 million confirmed cases in more than 227 countries and territories, and 26 naval ships. Chest CT is an effective way to detect COVID-19. This study proposed a novel deep learning model that can diagnose COVID-19 on chest CT more accurately and swiftly. Based on traditional deep convolutional neural network (DCNN) model, we proposed three improvements: We introduced stochastic pooling to replace average pooling and max pooling; We combined conv layer with batch normalization layer and obtained the conv block (CB); We combined dropout layer with fully connected layer and obtained the fully connected block (FCB). Our algorithm achieved a sensitivity of 93.28% %, a specificity of 94.00% %, and an accuracy of 93.64% %, in identifying COVID-19 from normal subjects. We proved using stochastic pooling yields better performance than average pooling and max pooling. We compared different structure configurations and proved our 3CB + 2FCB yields the best performance. The proposed model is effective in detecting COVID-19 based on chest CT images. | 170 | COVID-19 | 32 | Mach Vis Appl | Other Topics | 0.000003 | 31.048 | 0.000003 | 77 | 0 | External | 2. Detection/Diagnosis | CT |
10.1101/2020.12.20.20248582 | 10.1101/2020.12.20.20248582 | Yes | null | null | 2,020 | 2020-12-23 | Preprint | medRxiv | 0 | rapid covid-19 diagnosis using deep learning of the computerized tomography scans | Several studies suggest that COVID-19 may be accompanied by symptoms such as a dry cough, muscle aches, sore throat, and mild to moderate respiratory illness. The symptoms of this disease indicate the fact that COVID-19 causes noticeable negative effects on the lungs. Therefore, considering the health status of the lungs using X-rays and CT scans of the chest can significantly help diagnose COVID-19 infection. Due to the fact that most of the methods that have been proposed to COVID-19 diagnose deal with the lengthy testing time and also might give more false positive and false negative results, this paper aims to review and implement artificial intelligence (AI) image-based diagnosis methods in order to detect coronavirus infection with zero or near to zero false positives and false negatives rates. Besides the already existing AI image-based medical diagnosis method for the other well-known disease, this study aims on finding the most accurate COVID-19 detection method among AI methods such as machine learning (ML) and artificial neural network (ANN), ensemble learning (EL) methods. | 170 | Ache;COVID-19;Coronavirus Infections;Cough;Infections;Sore Throat | null | null | Other Topics | null | null | null | null | null | External | 2. Detection/Diagnosis | CT |
33171345 | 10.1016/j.media.2020.101860 | Yes | PMC7558247 | 33,171,345 | 2,020 | 2020-11-11 | Journal Article;Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't | Peer reviewed (PubMed) | 1 | ai-driven quantification staging and outcome prediction of covid-19 pneumonia | Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) emerged in 2019 and disseminated around the world rapidly. Computed tomography (CT) imaging has been proven to be an important tool for screening, disease quantification and staging. The latter is of extreme importance for organizational anticipation (availability of intensive care unit beds, patient management planning) as well as to accelerate drug development through rapid, reproducible and quantified assessment of treatment response. Even if currently there are no specific guidelines for the staging of the patients, CT together with some clinical and biological biomarkers are used. In this study, we collected a multi-center cohort and we investigated the use of medical imaging and artificial intelligence for disease quantification, staging and outcome prediction. Our approach relies on automatic deep learning-based disease quantification using an ensemble of architectures, and a data-driven consensus for the staging and outcome prediction of the patients fusing imaging biomarkers with clinical and biological attributes. Highly promising results on multiple external/independent evaluation cohorts as well as comparisons with expert human readers demonstrate the potentials of our approach. | 172 | COVID-19;Pneumonia | 63 | Med Image Anal | Drug;Architecture;Neural Networks | 0.000004 | 49.528 | 0.000004 | 147 | 0 | Self-recorded/clinical | 4. Prognosis/Treatment | CT |
2003.10769 | null | Yes | null | null | 2,020 | 2020-03-27 | Preprint | arXiv | 0 | estimating uncertainty and interpretability in deep learning for coronavirus (covid-19) detection | Deep Learning has achieved state of the art performance in medical imaging. However, these methods for disease detection focus exclusively on improving the accuracy of classification or predictions without quantifying uncertainty in a decision. Knowing how much confidence there is in a computer-based medical diagnosis is essential for gaining clinicians trust in the technology and therefore improve treatment. Today, the 2019 Coronavirus (SARS-CoV-2) infections are a major healthcare challenge around the world. Detecting COVID-19 in X-ray images is crucial for diagnosis, assessment and treatment. However, diagnostic uncertainty in the report is a challenging and yet inevitable task for radiologist. In this paper, we investigate how drop-weights based Bayesian Convolutional Neural Networks (BCNN) can estimate uncertainty in Deep Learning solution to improve the diagnostic performance of the human-machine team using publicly available COVID-19 chest X-ray dataset and show that the uncertainty in prediction is highly correlates with accuracy of prediction. We believe that the availability of uncertainty-aware deep learning solution will enable a wider adoption of Artificial Intelligence (AI) in a clinical setting. | 172 | COVID-19 | null | null | Coronavirus Infections;Art;Health Care | null | null | null | null | null | External | Segmentation-only | X-Ray |
33603047 | 10.1038/s41598-021-83424-5 | Yes | PMC7892869 | 33,603,047 | 2,021 | 2021-02-20 | Journal Article;Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't | Peer reviewed (PubMed) | 1 | assisting scalable diagnosis automatically via ct images in the combat against covid-19 | The pandemic of Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) is causing enormous loss of life globally. Prompt case identification is critical. The reference method is the real-time reverse transcription PCR (RT-PCR) assay, whose limitations may curb its prompt large-scale application. COVID-19 manifests with chest computed tomography (CT) abnormalities, some even before the onset of symptoms. We tested the hypothesis that the application of deep learning (DL) to 3D CT images could help identify COVID-19 infections. Using data from 920 COVID-19 and 1,073 non-COVID-19 pneumonia patients, we developed a modified DenseNet-264 model, COVIDNet, to classify CT images to either class. When tested on an independent set of 233 COVID-19 and 289 non-COVID-19 pneumonia patients, COVIDNet achieved an accuracy rate of 94.3% and an area under the curve of 0.98. As of March 23, 2020, the COVIDNet system had been used 11,966 times with a sensitivity of 91.12% and a specificity of 88.50% in six hospitals with PCR confirmation. Application of DL to CT images may improve both efficiency and capacity of case detection and long-term surveillance. | 173 | COVID-19;Infections;Pneumonia | 13 | Sci Rep | Polymerase Chain Reaction;Other Topics;Retrospective Studies;Reverse Transcription | 0.000001 | 37.96 | 0.000002 | 89 | 0 | Self-recorded/clinical | 2. Detection/Diagnosis | CT |
32436845 | 10.5152/dir.2019.20294 | Yes | PMC7490030 | 32,436,845 | 2,020 | 2020-05-22 | Journal Article;Review | Peer reviewed (PubMed) | 1 | a review on the use of artificial intelligence for medical imaging of the lungs of patients with coronavirus disease 2019 | The results of research on the use of artificial intelligence (AI) for medical imaging of the lungs of patients with coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) has been published in various forms. In this study, we reviewed the AI for diagnostic imaging of COVID-19 pneumonia. PubMed, arXiv, medRxiv, and Google scholar were used to search for AI studies. There were 15 studies of COVID-19 that used AI for medical imaging. Of these, 11 studies used AI for computed tomography (CT) and 4 used AI for chest radiography. Eight studies presented independent test data, 5 used disclosed data, and 4 disclosed the AI source codes. The number of datasets ranged from 106 to 5941, with sensitivities ranging from 0.67-1.00 and specificities ranging from 0.81-1.00 for prediction of COVID-19 pneumonia. Four studies with independent test datasets showed a breakdown of the data ratio and reported prediction of COVID-19 pneumonia with sensitivity, specificity, and area under the curve (AUC). These 4 studies showed very high sensitivity, specificity, and AUC, in the range of 0.9-0.98, 0.91-0.96, and 0.96-0.99, respectively. | 173 | COVID-19;Pneumonia | 21 | Diagn Interv Radiol | Other Topics | 0.000004 | 82.144 | 0.000004 | 252 | 0 | External | Review | Multimodal |
2008.11639 | null | Yes | null | null | 2,020 | 2020-10-09 | Preprint | arXiv | 0 | a comparison of deep machine learning algorithms in covid-19 disease diagnosis | The aim of the work is to use deep neural network models for solving the problem of image recognition. These days, every human being is threatened by a harmful coronavirus disease, also called COVID-19 disease. The spread of coronavirus affects the economy of many countries in the world. To find COVID-19 patients early is very essential to avoid the spread and harm to society. Pathological tests and Chromatography (CT) scans are helpful for the diagnosis of COVID-19. However, these tests are having drawbacks such as a large number of false positives, and cost of these tests are so expensive. Hence, it requires finding an easy, accurate, and less expensive way for the detection of the harmful COVID-19 disease. Chest-x-ray can be useful for the detection of this disease. Therefore, in this work chest, x-ray images are used for the diagnosis of suspected COVID-19 patients using modern machine learning techniques. The analysis of the results is carried out and conclusions are made about the effectiveness of deep machine learning algorithms in image recognition problems. | 173 | COVID-19 | null | null | Neural Networks;Other Topics | null | null | null | null | null | External | 2. Detection/Diagnosis | X-Ray |
33286289 | 10.3390/e22050517 | Yes | PMC7517011 | 33,286,289 | 2,020 | 2020-12-09 | Journal Article | Peer reviewed (PubMed) | 1 | classification of covid-19 coronavirus pneumonia and healthy lungs in ct scans using q-deformed entropy and deep learning features | Many health systems over the world have collapsed due to limited capacity and a dramatic increase of suspected COVID-19 cases. What has emerged is the need for finding an efficient, quick and accurate method to mitigate the overloading of radiologists' efforts to diagnose the suspected cases. This study presents the combination of deep learning of extracted features with the Q-deformed entropy handcrafted features for discriminating between COVID-19 coronavirus, pneumonia and healthy computed tomography (CT) lung scans. In this study, pre-processing is used to reduce the effect of intensity variations between CT slices. Then histogram thresholding is used to isolate the background of the CT lung scan. Each CT lung scan undergoes a feature extraction which involves deep learning and a Q-deformed entropy algorithm. The obtained features are classified using a long short-term memory (LSTM) neural network classifier. Subsequently, combining all extracted features significantly improves the performance of the LSTM network to precisely discriminate between COVID-19, pneumonia and healthy cases. The maximum achieved accuracy for classifying the collected dataset comprising 321 patients is 99.68%. | 173 | COVID-19;Pneumonia | 46 | Entropy (Basel) | Health;Radiologists;Entropy | 0.000002 | 32.96 | 0.000003 | 86 | 0 | External | 2. Detection/Diagnosis | CT |
32971995 | 10.3390/ijerph17186933 | Yes | PMC7557723 | 32,971,995 | 2,020 | 2020-09-26 | Journal Article;Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't | Peer reviewed (PubMed) | 1 | unveiling covid-19 from chest x-ray with deep learning: a hurdles race with small data | The possibility to use widespread and simple chest X-ray (CXR) imaging for early screening of COVID-19 patients is attracting much interest from both the clinical and the AI community. In this study we provide insights and also raise warnings on what is reasonable to expect by applying deep learning to COVID classification of CXR images. We provide a methodological guide and critical reading of an extensive set of statistical results that can be obtained using currently available datasets. In particular, we take the challenge posed by current small size COVID data and show how significant can be the bias introduced by transfer-learning using larger public non-COVID CXR datasets. We also contribute by providing results on a medium size COVID CXR dataset, just collected by one of the major emergency hospitals in Northern Italy during the peak of the COVID pandemic. These novel data allow us to contribute to validate the generalization capacity of preliminary results circulating in the scientific community. Our conclusions shed some light into the possibility to effectively discriminate COVID using CXR. | 174 | COVID-19 | 73 | Int J Environ Res Public Health | Coronavirus Infections;Transfer Learning | 0.000003 | 50.928 | 0.000003 | 146 | 0 | External | 2. Detection/Diagnosis | X-Ray |
rs-1396136 | 10.21203/rs.3.rs-1396136/v1 | Yes | null | null | 2,022 | 2022-03-11 | Preprint | Research Square | 0 | exploration of interpretability techniques for deep covid-19 classification using chest x-ray images | The outbreak of COVID-19 has shocked the entire world with its fairly rapid spread and has challenged different sectors. One of the most effective ways to limit its spread is the early and accurate diagnosis of infected patients. Medical imaging such as X-ray and Computed Tomography (CT) combined with the potential of Artificial Intelligence (AI) plays an essential role in supporting the medical staff in the diagnosis process. Thereby, five different deep learning models (ResNet18, ResNet34, InceptionV3, InceptionResNetV2, and DenseNet161) and their Ensemble have been used in this paper, to classify COVID-19, pneumoniae and healthy subjects using Chest X-Ray images. Multi-label classification was performed to predict multiple pathologies for each patient, if present. Foremost, the interpretability of each of the networks was thoroughly studied using techniques like occlusion, saliency, input X gradient, guided backpropagation, integrated gradients, and DeepLIFT. The mean Micro-F1 score of the models for COVID-19 classifications ranges from 0.66 to 0.875, and is 0.89 for the Ensemble of the network models. The qualitative results depicted the ResNets to be the most interpretable models. | 175 | COVID-19 | null | null | Disease Outbreaks;Other Topics | null | null | null | null | null | External | 2. Detection/Diagnosis | X-Ray |
2003.14363 | null | Yes | null | null | 2,020 | 2020-03-31 | Preprint | arXiv | 0 | automated methods for detection and classification pneumonia based on x-ray images using deep learning | Recently, researchers, specialists, and companies around the world are rolling out deep learning and image processing-based systems that can fastly process hundreds of X-Ray and computed tomography (CT) images to accelerate the diagnosis of pneumonia such as SARS, COVID-19, and aid in its containment. Medical images analysis is one of the most promising research areas, it provides facilities for diagnosis and making decisions of a number of diseases such as MERS, COVID-19. In this paper, we present a comparison of recent Deep Convolutional Neural Network (DCNN) architectures for automatic binary classification of pneumonia images based fined tuned versions of (VGG16, VGG19, DenseNet201, Inception_ResNet_V2, Inception_V3, Resnet50, MobileNet_V2 and Xception). The proposed work has been tested using chest X-Ray and CT dataset which contains 5856 images (4273 pneumonia and 1583 normal). As result we can conclude that fine-tuned version of Resnet50, MobileNet_V2 and Inception_Resnet_V2 show highly satisfactory performance with rate of increase in training and validation accuracy (more than 96% of accuracy). Unlike CNN, Xception, VGG16, VGG19, Inception_V3 and DenseNet201 display low performance (more than 84% accuracy). | 175 | COVID-19;Pneumonia | null | null | Other Topics | null | null | null | null | null | External | 2. Detection/Diagnosis | X-Ray |
32760732 | 10.3389/fmed.2020.00427 | Yes | PMC7371960 | 32,760,732 | 2,020 | 2020-08-08 | Journal Article | Peer reviewed (PubMed) | 1 | deep learning-based decision-tree classifier for covid-19 diagnosis from chest x-ray imaging | The global pandemic of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) has resulted in an increased demand for testing, diagnosis, and treatment. Reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) is the definitive test for the diagnosis of COVID-19; however, chest X-ray radiography (CXR) is a fast, effective, and affordable test that identifies the possible COVID-19-related pneumonia. This study investigates the feasibility of using a deep learning-based decision-tree classifier for detecting COVID-19 from CXR images. The proposed classifier comprises three binary decision trees, each trained by a deep learning model with convolution neural network based on the PyTorch frame. The first decision tree classifies the CXR images as normal or abnormal. The second tree identifies the abnormal images that contain signs of tuberculosis, whereas the third does the same for COVID-19. The accuracies of the first and second decision trees are 98 and 80%, respectively, whereas the average accuracy of the third decision tree is 95%. The proposed deep learning-based decision-tree classifier may be used in pre-screening patients to conduct triage and fast-track decision making before RT-PCR results are available. | 175 | COVID-19;Pneumonia;Tuberculosis | 81 | Front Med (Lausanne) | Pneumonia;Polymerase Chain Reaction;Decision Trees;Reverse Transcription | 0.000005 | 71.832 | 0.000006 | 183 | 0 | External | 2. Detection/Diagnosis | X-Ray |
33980980 | 10.1038/s41746-021-00453-0 | Yes | PMC8115328 | 33,980,980 | 2,021 | 2021-05-14 | Journal Article | Peer reviewed (PubMed) | 1 | an artificial intelligence system for predicting the deterioration of covid-19 patients in the emergency department | During the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, rapid and accurate triage of patients at the emergency department is critical to inform decision-making. We propose a data-driven approach for automatic prediction of deterioration risk using a deep neural network that learns from chest X-ray images and a gradient boosting model that learns from routine clinical variables. Our AI prognosis system, trained using data from 3661 patients, achieves an area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC) of 0.786 (95% CI: 0.745-0.830) when predicting deterioration within 96 hours. The deep neural network extracts informative areas of chest X-ray images to assist clinicians in interpreting the predictions and performs comparably to two radiologists in a reader study. In order to verify performance in a real clinical setting, we silently deployed a preliminary version of the deep neural network at New York University Langone Health during the first wave of the pandemic, which produced accurate predictions in real-time. In summary, our findings demonstrate the potential of the proposed system for assisting front-line physicians in the triage of COVID-19 patients. | 175 | COVID-19;COVID-19 Pandemic | 41 | NPJ Digit Med | Other Topics | 0.000002 | 22.24 | 0.000002 | 48 | 0 | Self-recorded/clinical | 4. Prognosis/Treatment | X-Ray |
2007.01108 | null | Yes | null | null | 2,020 | 2020-06-30 | Preprint | arXiv | 0 | evaluation of contemporary convolutional neural network architectures for detecting covid-19 from chest radiographs | Interpreting chest radiograph, a.ka. chest x-ray, images is a necessary and crucial diagnostic tool used by medical professionals to detect and identify many diseases that may plague a patient. Although the images themselves contain a wealth of valuable information, their usefulness may be limited by how well they are interpreted, especially when the reviewing radiologist may be fatigued or when or an experienced radiologist is unavailable. Research in the use of deep learning models to analyze chest radiographs yielded impressive results where, in some instances, the models outperformed practicing radiologists. Amidst the COVID-19 pandemic, researchers have explored and proposed the use of said deep models to detect COVID-19 infections from radiographs as a possible way to help ease the strain on medical resources. In this study, we train and evaluate three model architectures, proposed for chest radiograph analysis, under varying conditions, find issues that discount the impressive model performances proposed by contemporary studies on this subject, and propose methodologies to train models that yield more reliable results.. Code, scripts, pre-trained models, and visualizations are available at GitHub | 177 | COVID-19;COVID-19 Pandemic;Infections;Plague | null | null | Other Topics | null | null | null | null | null | External | 2. Detection/Diagnosis | X-Ray |
32568679 | 10.1016/j.compbiomed.2020.103805 | Yes | PMC7202857 | 32,568,679 | 2,020 | 2020-06-23 | Journal Article | Peer reviewed (PubMed) | 1 | covid-19 detection using deep learning models to exploit social mimic optimization and structured chest x-ray images using fuzzy color and stacking approaches | Coronavirus causes a wide variety of respiratory infections and it is an RNA-type virus that can infect both humans and animal species. It often causes pneumonia in humans. Artificial intelligence models have been helpful for successful analyses in the biomedical field. In this study, Coronavirus was detected using a deep learning model, which is a sub-branch of artificial intelligence. Our dataset consists of three classes namely: coronavirus, pneumonia, and normal X-ray imagery. In this study, the data classes were restructured using the Fuzzy Color technique as a preprocessing step and the images that were structured with the original images were stacked. In the next step, the stacked dataset was trained with deep learning models (MobileNetV2, SqueezeNet) and the feature sets obtained by the models were processed using the Social Mimic optimization method. Thereafter, efficient features were combined and classified using Support Vector Machines (SVM). The overall classification rate obtained with the proposed approach was 99.27%. With the proposed approach in this study, it is evident that the model can efficiently contribute to the detection of COVID-19 disease. | 177 | COVID-19;Pneumonia;Respiratory Tract Infections | 197 | Comput Biol Med | Other Topics | 0.000007 | 131.656 | 0.000008 | 355 | 0 | External | 2. Detection/Diagnosis | X-Ray |
2010.09456 | null | Yes | null | null | 2,020 | 2020-10-19 | Preprint | arXiv | 0 | gasnet: weakly-supervised framework for covid-19 lesion segmentation | Segmentation of infected areas in chest CT volumes is of great significance for further diagnosis and treatment of COVID-19 patients. Due to the complex shapes and varied appearances of lesions, a large number of voxel-level labeled samples are generally required to train a lesion segmentation network, which is a main bottleneck for developing deep learning based medical image segmentation algorithms. In this paper, we propose a weakly-supervised lesion segmentation framework by embedding the Generative Adversarial training process into the Segmentation Network, which is called GASNet. GASNet is optimized to segment the lesion areas of a COVID-19 CT by the segmenter, and to replace the abnormal appearance with a generated normal appearance by the generator, so that the restored CT volumes are indistinguishable from healthy CT volumes by the discriminator. GASNet is supervised by chest CT volumes of many healthy and COVID-19 subjects without voxel-level annotations. Experiments on three public databases show that when using as few as one voxel-level labeled sample, the performance of GASNet is comparable to fully-supervised segmentation algorithms trained on dozens of voxel-level labeled samples. | 178 | COVID-19 | null | null | Other Topics | null | null | null | null | null | External | Segmentation-only | CT |
10.1101/2020.05.04.20090779 | 10.1101/2020.05.04.20090779 | Yes | null | null | 2,020 | 2020-05-08 | Preprint | medRxiv | 0 | mantiscovid: rapid x-ray chest radiograph and mortality rate evaluation with artificial intelligence for covid-19 | The novel coronavirus pandemic has negative impacts over the health, economy and well-being of the global population. This negative effect is growing with the high spreading rate of the virus. The most critical step to prevent the spreading of the virus is pre-screening and early diagnosis of the individuals. This results in quaranteeing the patients not to effect the healthy population. COVID-19 is the name of the disease caused by the novel coronavirus. It has a high infection rate and it is urgent to diagnose many patients as we can to prevent the spread of the virus at the early stage. Rapid diagnostic tools development is urgent to save lives. MantisCOVID is a cloud-based pre-diagnosis tool to be accessed from the internet. This tool delivers a rapid screening test by analyzing the X-ray Chest Radiograph scans via Artificial Intelligence (AI) and it also evaluates the mortality rate of patients with the synthesis of the patient’s history with the machine learning methods. This study reveals the methods used over the platform and evaluation of the algorithms via open datasets. | 178 | COVID-19;Infections | null | null | Coronavirus Infections;Diagnostic Tests;COVID-19 Testing | null | null | null | null | null | External | 2. Detection/Diagnosis | X-Ray |
32849861 | 10.1155/2020/8828855 | Yes | PMC7439162 | 32,849,861 | 2,020 | 2020-08-28 | Journal Article | Peer reviewed (PubMed) | 1 | covid-19 deep learning prediction model using publicly available radiologist-adjudicated chest x-ray images as training data: preliminary findings | The key component in deep learning research is the availability of training data sets. With a limited number of publicly available COVID-19 chest X-ray images, the generalization and robustness of deep learning models to detect COVID-19 cases developed based on these images are questionable. We aimed to use thousands of readily available chest radiograph images with clinical findings associated with COVID-19 as a training data set, mutually exclusive from the images with confirmed COVID-19 cases, which will be used as the testing data set. We used a deep learning model based on the ResNet-101 convolutional neural network architecture, which was pretrained to recognize objects from a million of images and then retrained to detect abnormality in chest X-ray images. The performance of the model in terms of area under the receiver operating curve, sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy was 0.82, 77.3%, 71.8%, and 71.9%, respectively. The strength of this study lies in the use of labels that have a strong clinical association with COVID-19 cases and the use of mutually exclusive publicly available data for training, validation, and testing. | 178 | COVID-19 | 46 | Int J Biomed Imaging | Other Topics | 0.000003 | 32.232 | 0.000003 | 85 | 0 | External | 2. Detection/Diagnosis | X-Ray |
32619398 | 10.1080/07391102.2020.1788642 | Yes | null | 32,619,398 | 2,020 | 2020-07-04 | Journal Article | Peer reviewed (PubMed) | 1 | classification of the covid-19 infected patients using densenet201 based deep transfer learning | Deep learning models are widely used in the automatic analysis of radiological images. These techniques can train the weights of networks on large datasets as well as fine tuning the weights of pre-trained networks on small datasets. Due to the small COVID-19 dataset available, the pre-trained neural networks can be used for diagnosis of coronavirus. However, these techniques applied on chest CT image is very limited till now. Hence, the main aim of this paper to use the pre-trained deep learning architectures as an automated tool to detection and diagnosis of COVID-19 in chest CT. A DenseNet201 based deep transfer learning (DTL) is proposed to classify the patients as COVID infected or not i.e. COVID-19 or COVID . The proposed model is utilized to extract features by using its own learned weights on the ImageNet dataset along with a convolutional neural structure. Extensive experiments are performed to evaluate the performance of the propose DTL model on COVID-19 chest CT scan images. Comparative analyses reveal that the proposed DTL based COVID-19 classification model outperforms the competitive approaches.Communicated by Ramaswamy H. Sarma. | 180 | COVID-19 | 174 | J Biomol Struct Dyn | Transfer Learning;Architecture;Neural Networks;Tomography | 0.000006 | 218.76 | 0.000013 | 477 | 0 | External | 2. Detection/Diagnosis | CT |
33363252 | 10.1016/j.imu.2020.100505 | Yes | PMC7752710 | 33,363,252 | 2,020 | 2020-12-29 | Journal Article | Peer reviewed (PubMed) | 1 | emcnet: automated covid-19 diagnosis from x-ray images using convolutional neural network and ensemble of machine learning classifiers | Recently, coronavirus disease (COVID-19) has caused a serious effect on the healthcare system and the overall global economy. Doctors, researchers, and experts are focusing on alternative ways for the rapid detection of COVID-19, such as the development of automatic COVID-19 detection systems. In this paper, an automated detection scheme named EMCNet was proposed to identify COVID-19 patients by evaluating chest X-ray images. A convolutional neural network was developed focusing on the simplicity of the model to extract deep and high-level features from X-ray images of patients infected with COVID-19. With the extracted features, binary machine learning classifiers (random forest, support vector machine, decision tree, and AdaBoost) were developed for the detection of COVID-19. Finally, these classifiers' outputs were combined to develop an ensemble of classifiers, which ensures better results for the dataset of various sizes and resolutions. In comparison with other recent deep learning-based systems, EMCNet showed better performance with 98.91% accuracy, 100% precision, 97.82% recall, and 98.89% F1-score. The system could maintain its great importance on the automatic detection of COVID-19 through instant detection and low false negative rate. | 180 | COVID-19 | 60 | Inform Med Unlocked | Health Care;Research Personnel;Support Vector Machine;Decision Trees;Random Forest | 0.000005 | 94.64 | 0.000007 | 228 | 0 | External | 2. Detection/Diagnosis | X-Ray |
32337662 | 10.1007/s10096-020-03901-z | Yes | PMC7183816 | 32,337,662 | 2,020 | 2020-04-28 | Journal Article | Peer reviewed (PubMed) | 1 | classification of covid-19 patients from chest ct images using multi-objective differential evolution-based convolutional neural networks | Early classification of 2019 novel coronavirus disease (COVID-19) is essential for disease cure and control. Compared with reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR), chest computed tomography (CT) imaging may be a significantly more trustworthy, useful, and rapid technique to classify and evaluate COVID-19, specifically in the epidemic region. Almost all hospitals have CT imaging machines; therefore, the chest CT images can be utilized for early classification of COVID-19 patients. However, the chest CT-based COVID-19 classification involves a radiology expert and considerable time, which is valuable when COVID-19 infection is growing at rapid rate. Therefore, an automated analysis of chest CT images is desirable to save the medical professionals' precious time. In this paper, a convolutional neural networks (CNN) is used to classify the COVID-19-infected patients as infected (+ve) or not (-ve). Additionally, the initial parameters of CNN are tuned using multi-objective differential evolution (MODE). Extensive experiments are performed by considering the proposed and the competitive machine learning techniques on the chest CT images. Extensive analysis shows that the proposed model can classify the chest CT images at a good accuracy rate. | 180 | COVID-19;Infections | 204 | Eur J Clin Microbiol Infect Dis | Coronavirus Infections;COVID-19 Testing;Sensitivity and Specificity;Polymerase Chain Reaction;Neural Networks;Paper;Reverse Transcription | 0.000009 | 202.568 | 0.000013 | 507 | 0 | External | 2. Detection/Diagnosis | CT |
33041409 | 10.1016/j.patrec.2020.10.001 | Yes | PMC7532353 | 33,041,409 | 2,020 | 2020-10-13 | Journal Article | Peer reviewed (PubMed) | 1 | a light cnn for detecting covid-19 from ct scans of the chest | Computer Tomography (CT) imaging of the chest is a valid diagnosis tool to detect COVID-19 promptly and to control the spread of the disease. In this work we propose a light Convolutional Neural Network (CNN) design, based on the model of the SqueezeNet, for the efficient discrimination of COVID-19 CT images with respect to other community-acquired pneumonia and/or healthy CT images. The architecture allows to an accuracy of 85.03% with an improvement of about 3.2% in the first dataset arrangement and of about 2.1% in the second dataset arrangement. The obtained gain, though of low entity, can be really important in medical diagnosis and, in particular, for Covid-19 scenario. Also the average classification time on a high-end workstation, 1.25 s, is very competitive with respect to that of more complex CNN designs, 13.41 s, witch require pre-processing. The proposed CNN can be executed on medium-end laptop without GPU acceleration in 7.81 s: this is impossible for methods requiring GPU acceleration. The performance of the method can be further improved with efficient pre-processing strategies for witch GPU acceleration is not necessary. | 180 | COVID-19;Pneumonia | 79 | Pattern Recognit Lett | Other Topics | 0.000002 | 40.264 | 0.000003 | 93 | 0 | External | 2. Detection/Diagnosis | CT |
33440674 | 10.3390/s21020455 | Yes | PMC7828058 | 33,440,674 | 2,021 | 2021-01-15 | Journal Article | Peer reviewed (PubMed) | 1 | explainable covid-19 detection using chest ct scans and deep learning | This paper explores how well deep learning models trained on chest CT images can diagnose COVID-19 infected people in a fast and automated process. To this end, we adopted advanced deep network architectures and proposed a transfer learning strategy using custom-sized input tailored for each deep architecture to achieve the best performance. We conducted extensive sets of experiments on two CT image datasets, namely, the SARS-CoV-2 CT-scan and the COVID19-CT. The results show superior performances for our models compared with previous studies. Our best models achieved average accuracy, precision, sensitivity, specificity, and F1-score values of 99.4%, 99.6%, 99.8%, 99.6%, and 99.4% on the SARS-CoV-2 dataset, and 92.9%, 91.3%, 93.7%, 92.2%, and 92.5% on the COVID19-CT dataset, respectively. For better interpretability of the results, we applied visualization techniques to provide visual explanations for the models' predictions. Feature visualizations of the learned features show well-separated clusters representing CT images of COVID-19 and non-COVID-19 cases. Moreover, the visualizations indicate that our models are not only capable of identifying COVID-19 cases but also provide accurate localization of the COVID-19-associated regions, as indicated by well-trained radiologists. | 181 | COVID-19 | 63 | Sensors (Basel) | Transfer Learning;Algorithms;Architecture;Sensitivity and Specificity;Neural Networks;Tomography | 0.000005 | 201.6 | 0.00001 | 468 | 0 | External | 2. Detection/Diagnosis | CT |
10.1101/2020.11.08.20228080 | 10.1101/2020.11.08.20228080 | Yes | null | null | 2,020 | 2020-11-12 | Preprint | medRxiv | 0 | automatic covid-19 detection from chest radiographic images using convolutional neural network | The global pandemic of the novel coronavirus that started in Wuhan, China has affected more than 2 million people worldwide and caused more than 130,000 tragic deaths. To date, the COVID-19 virus is still spreading and affecting thousands of people. The main problem with testing for COVID-19 is that there are very few test kits available for a large number of affected or suspicious individuals. This leads to the need for automatic detection systems that use artificial intelligence. Deep learning is one of the most powerful AI tools available, so we recommend creating a convolutional neural network to detect COVID-19 positive patients from chest radiographs. According to previous studies, lung X-rays of COVID-19-positive patients show obvious characteristics, so this is a reliable method for testing patients, because X-ray examination of suspicious patients is easier than rt-PCR. Our model has been trained with 820 chest radiographic images (excluding data augmentation) collected from 3 databases, with a classification accuracy of 99.61% (training accuracy of 99.59%), sensitivity of 99.21% and specificity of 99.29 %, proved that our model has become a reliable COVID-19 detector. | 181 | COVID-19;Death | null | null | Polymerase Chain Reaction;Other Topics | null | null | null | null | null | External | 2. Detection/Diagnosis | X-Ray |
2004.05645 | null | Yes | null | null | 2,020 | 2020-04-12 | Preprint | arXiv | 0 | residual attention u-net for automated multi-class segmentation of covid-19 chest ct images | The novel coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) has been spreading rapidly around the world and caused significant impact on the public health and economy. However, there is still lack of studies on effectively quantifying the lung infection caused by COVID-19. As a basic but challenging task of the diagnostic framework, segmentation plays a crucial role in accurate quantification of COVID-19 infection measured by computed tomography (CT) images. To this end, we proposed a novel deep learning algorithm for automated segmentation of multiple COVID-19 infection regions. Specifically, we use the Aggregated Residual Transformations to learn a robust and expressive feature representation and apply the soft attention mechanism to improve the capability of the model to distinguish a variety of symptoms of the COVID-19. With a public CT image dataset, we validate the efficacy of the proposed algorithm in comparison with other competing methods. Experimental results demonstrate the outstanding performance of our algorithm for automated segmentation of COVID-19 Chest CT images. Our study provides a promising deep leaning-based segmentation tool to lay a foundation to quantitative diagnosis of COVID-19 lung infection in CT images. | 181 | COVID-19;Infections | null | null | Other Topics | null | null | null | null | null | External | Segmentation-only | CT |
33161334 | 10.1016/j.compbiomed.2020.104092 | Yes | PMC7591316 | 33,161,334 | 2,020 | 2020-11-09 | Journal Article | Peer reviewed (PubMed) | 1 | the importance of standardisation - covid-19 ct and radiograph image data stock for deep learning purpose | With the number of affected individuals still growing world-wide, the research on COVID-19 is continuously expanding. The deep learning community concentrates their efforts on exploring if neural networks can potentially support the diagnosis using CT and radiograph images of patients' lungs. The two most popular publicly available datasets for COVID-19 classification are COVID-CT and COVID-19 Image Data Collection. In this work, we propose a new dataset which we call COVID-19 CT and Radiograph Image Data Stock. It contains both CT and radiograph samples of COVID-19 lung findings and combines them with additional data to ensure a sufficient number of diverse COVID-19-negative samples. Moreover, it is supplemented with a carefully defined split. The aim of COVID-19 CT and Radiograph Image Data Stock is to create a public pool of CT and radiograph images of lungs to increase the efficiency of distinguishing COVID-19 disease from other types of pneumonia and from healthy chest. We hope that the creation of this dataset would allow standardisation of the approach taken for training deep neural networks for COVID-19 classification and eventually for building more reliable models. | 181 | COVID-19;Pneumonia | 5 | Comput Biol Med | Other Topics | 0.000004 | 64.952 | 0.000004 | 195 | 0 | Self-recorded/clinical | 2. Detection/Diagnosis | CT |
32397844 | 10.1080/07391102.2020.1767212 | Yes | PMC7256347 | 32,397,844 | 2,020 | 2020-05-14 | Journal Article | Peer reviewed (PubMed) | 1 | using x-ray images and deep learning for automated detection of coronavirus disease | Coronavirus is still the leading cause of death worldwide. There are a set number of COVID-19 test units accessible in emergency clinics because of the expanding cases daily. Therefore, it is important to implement an automatic detection and classification system as a speedy elective finding choice to forestall COVID-19 spreading among individuals. Medical images analysis is one of the most promising research areas, it provides facilities for diagnosis and making decisions of a number of diseases such as Coronavirus. This paper conducts a comparative study of the use of the recent deep learning models (VGG16, VGG19, DenseNet201, Inception_ResNet_V2, Inception_V3, Resnet50, and MobileNet_V2) to deal with detection and classification of coronavirus pneumonia. The experiments were conducted using chest X-ray and CT dataset of 6087 images (2780 images of bacterial pneumonia, 1493 of coronavirus, 231 of Covid19, and 1583 normal) and confusion matrices are used to evaluate model performances. Results found out that the use of inception_Resnet_V2 and Densnet201 provide better results compared to other models used in this work (92.18% accuracy for Inception-ResNetV2 and 88.09% accuracy for Densnet201).Communicated by Ramaswamy H. Sarma. | 181 | COVID-19;Confusion;Death;Pneumonia;Pneumonia, Bacterial | 101 | J Biomol Struct Dyn | Other Topics | 0.000003 | 80.368 | 0.000006 | 194 | 0 | External | 2. Detection/Diagnosis | X-Ray |
2007.05494 | null | Yes | null | null | 2,020 | 2020-07-01 | Preprint | arXiv | 0 | automatic detection of covid-19 cases on x-ray images using convolutional neural networks | In recent months the world has been surprised by the rapid advance of COVID-19. In order to face this disease and minimize its socio-economic impacts, in addition to surveillance and treatment, diagnosis is a crucial procedure. However, the realization of this is hampered by the delay and the limited access to laboratory tests, demanding new strategies to carry out case triage. In this scenario, deep learning models are being proposed as a possible option to assist the diagnostic process based on chest X-ray and computed tomography images. Therefore, this research aims to automate the process of detecting COVID-19 cases from chest images, using convolutional neural networks (CNN) through deep learning techniques. The results can contribute to expand access to other forms of detection of COVID-19 and to speed up the process of identifying this disease. All databases used, the codes built, and the results obtained from the models' training are available for open access. This action facilitates the involvement of other researchers in enhancing these models since this can contribute to the improvement of results and, consequently, the progress in confronting COVID-19. | 182 | COVID-19 | null | null | Other Topics | null | null | null | null | null | External | 2. Detection/Diagnosis | X-Ray |
2004.03698 | null | Yes | null | null | 2,020 | 2020-04-07 | Preprint | arXiv | 0 | coronavirus (covid-19) classification using deep features fusion and ranking technique | Coronavirus (COVID-19) emerged towards the end of 2019. World Health Organization (WHO) was identified it as a global epidemic. Consensus occurred in the opinion that using Computerized Tomography (CT) techniques for early diagnosis of pandemic disease gives both fast and accurate results. It was stated by expert radiologists that COVID-19 displays different behaviours in CT images. In this study, a novel method was proposed as fusing and ranking deep features to detect COVID-19 in early phase. 16x16 (Subset-1) and 32x32 (Subset-2) patches were obtained from 150 CT images to generate sub-datasets. Within the scope of the proposed method, 3000 patch images have been labelled as CoVID-19 and No finding for using in training and testing phase. Feature fusion and ranking method have been applied in order to increase the performance of the proposed method. Then, the processed data was classified with a Support Vector Machine (SVM). According to other pre-trained Convolutional Neural Network (CNN) models used in transfer learning, the proposed method shows high performance on Subset-2 with 98.27% accuracy, 98.93% sensitivity, 97.60% specificity, 97.63% precision, 98.28% F1-score and 96.54% Matthews Correlation Coefficient (MCC) metrics. | 185 | COVID-19 | null | null | Transfer Learning;World Health Organization;Tomography | null | null | null | null | null | External | 2. Detection/Diagnosis | CT |
32968435 | 10.3892/etm.2020.9210 | Yes | PMC7500043 | 32,968,435 | 2,020 | 2020-09-25 | Journal Article | Peer reviewed (PubMed) | 1 | advancing covid-19 differentiation with a robust preprocessing and integration of multi-institutional open-repository computer tomography datasets for deep learning analysis | The coronavirus pandemic and its unprecedented consequences globally has spurred the interest of the artificial intelligence research community. A plethora of published studies have investigated the role of imaging such as chest X-rays and computer tomography in coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) automated diagnosis. Οpen repositories of medical imaging data can play a significant role by promoting cooperation among institutes in a world-wide scale. However, they may induce limitations related to variable data quality and intrinsic differences due to the wide variety of scanner vendors and imaging parameters. In this study, a state-of-the-art custom U-Net model is presented with a dice similarity coefficient performance of 99.6% along with a transfer learning VGG-19 based model for COVID-19 versus pneumonia differentiation exhibiting an area under curve of 96.1%. The above was significantly improved over the baseline model trained with no segmentation in selected tomographic slices of the same dataset. The presented study highlights the importance of a robust preprocessing protocol for image analysis within a heterogeneous imaging dataset and assesses the potential diagnostic value of the presented COVID-19 model by comparing its performance to the state of the art. | 186 | COVID-19;Pneumonia | 4 | Exp Ther Med | Art;Transfer Learning;Tomography;Area under Curve | 0.000001 | 2.4 | 0.000001 | 8 | 0 | External | 2. Detection/Diagnosis | CT |
32834641 | 10.1016/j.chaos.2020.110153 | Yes | PMC7381895 | 32,834,641 | 2,020 | 2020-08-25 | Journal Article | Peer reviewed (PubMed) | 1 | automatic distinction between covid-19 and common pneumonia using multi-scale convolutional neural network on chest ct scans | The COVID-19 pneumonia is a global threat since it emerged in early December 2019. Driven by the desire to develop a computer-aided system for the rapid diagnosis of COVID-19 to assist radiologists and clinicians to combat with this pandemic, we retrospectively collected 206 patients with positive reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) for COVID-19 and their 416 chest computed tomography (CT) scans with abnormal findings from two hospitals, 412 non-COVID-19 pneumonia and their 412 chest CT scans with clear sign of pneumonia are also retrospectively selected from participating hospitals. Based on these CT scans, we design an artificial intelligence (AI) system that uses a multi-scale convolutional neural network (MSCNN) and evaluate its performance at both slice level and scan level. Experimental results show that the proposed AI has promising diagnostic performance in the detection of COVID-19 and differentiating it from other common pneumonia under limited number of training data, which has great potential to assist radiologists and physicians in performing a quick diagnosis and mitigate the heavy workload of them especially when the health system is overloaded. The data is publicly available for further research at . | 186 | COVID-19;Pneumonia | 43 | Chaos Solitons Fractals | Polymerase Chain Reaction;Reverse Transcription | 0.000003 | 50.008 | 0.000003 | 139 | 0 | Self-recorded/clinical | 2. Detection/Diagnosis | CT |
34127870 | 10.1016/j.patcog.2021.108109 | Yes | PMC8189738 | 34,127,870 | 2,021 | 2021-06-16 | Journal Article | Peer reviewed (PubMed) | 1 | scoat-net: a novel network for segmenting covid-19 lung opacification from ct images | Automatic segmentation of lung opacification from computed tomography (CT) images shows excellent potential for quickly and accurately quantifying the infection of Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) and judging the disease development and treatment response. However, some challenges still exist, including the complexity and variability features of the opacity regions, the small difference between the infected and healthy tissues, and the noise of CT images. Due to limited medical resources, it is impractical to obtain a large amount of data in a short time, which further hinders the training of deep learning models. To answer these challenges, we proposed a novel spatial- and channel-wise coarse-to-fine attention network (SCOAT-Net), inspired by the biological vision mechanism, for the segmentation of COVID-19 lung opacification from CT images. With the UNet++ as basic structure, our SCOAT-Net introduces the specially designed spatial-wise and channel-wise attention modules, which serve to collaboratively boost the attention learning of the network and extract the efficient features of the infected opacification regions at the pixel and channel levels. Experiments show that our proposed SCOAT-Net achieves better results compared to several state-of-the-art image segmentation networks and has acceptable generalization ability. | 187 | COVID-19;Infections | 12 | Pattern Recognit | Art;Noise;Attention;Tomography;Lung Diseases | 0.000002 | 23.88 | 0.000002 | 49 | 0 | Self-recorded/clinical | 2. Detection/Diagnosis | CT |
34764548 | 10.1007/s10489-020-01829-7 | Yes | PMC7474514 | 34,764,548 | 2,020 | 2020-09-05 | Journal Article | Peer reviewed (PubMed) | 1 | classification of covid-19 in chest x-ray images using detrac deep convolutional neural network | Chest X-ray is the first imaging technique that plays an important role in the diagnosis of COVID-19 disease. Due to the high availability of large-scale annotated image datasets, great success has been achieved using convolutional neural networks (CNN s) for image recognition and classification. However, due to the limited availability of annotated medical images, the classification of medical images remains the biggest challenge in medical diagnosis. Thanks to transfer learning, an effective mechanism that can provide a promising solution by transferring knowledge from generic object recognition tasks to domain-specific tasks. In this paper, we validate and a deep CNN, called Decompose, Transfer, and Compose (DeTraC), for the classification of COVID-19 chest X-ray images. DeTraC can deal with any irregularities in the image dataset by investigating its class boundaries using a class decomposition mechanism. The experimental results showed the capability of DeTraC in the detection of COVID-19 cases from a comprehensive image dataset collected from several hospitals around the world. High accuracy of 93.1% (with a sensitivity of 100%) was achieved by DeTraC in the detection of COVID-19 X-ray images from normal, and severe acute respiratory syndrome cases. | 187 | COVID-19;Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome | 250 | Appl Intell (Dordr) | Transfer Learning;Other Topics | 0.000005 | 129.232 | 0.000009 | 290 | 0 | External | 2. Detection/Diagnosis | X-Ray |
33037212 | 10.1038/s41467-020-18685-1 | Yes | PMC7547659 | 33,037,212 | 2,020 | 2020-10-11 | Evaluation Study;Journal Article;Multicenter Study;Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't | Peer reviewed (PubMed) | 1 | development and evaluation of an artificial intelligence system for covid-19 diagnosis | Early detection of COVID-19 based on chest CT enables timely treatment of patients and helps control the spread of the disease. We proposed an artificial intelligence (AI) system for rapid COVID-19 detection and performed extensive statistical analysis of CTs of COVID-19 based on the AI system. We developed and evaluated our system on a large dataset with more than 10 thousand CT volumes from COVID-19, influenza-A/B, non-viral community acquired pneumonia (CAP) and non-pneumonia subjects. In such a difficult multi-class diagnosis task, our deep convolutional neural network-based system is able to achieve an area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC) of 97.81% for multi-way classification on test cohort of 3,199 scans, AUC of 92.99% and 93.25% on two publicly available datasets, CC-CCII and MosMedData respectively. In a reader study involving five radiologists, the AI system outperforms all of radiologists in more challenging tasks at a speed of two orders of magnitude above them. Diagnosis performance of chest x-ray (CXR) is compared to that of CT. Detailed interpretation of deep network is also performed to relate system outputs with CT presentations. The code is available at GitHub . | 187 | COVID-19;Influenza, Human;Pneumonia | 174 | Nat Commun | Coronavirus Infections;ROC Curve;Age | 0.000005 | 120.288 | 0.000007 | 312 | 0 | Self-recorded/clinical | 2. Detection/Diagnosis | Multimodal |
32836613 | 10.1007/s40009-020-01009-8 | Yes | PMC7391230 | 32,836,613 | 2,020 | 2020-08-25 | Journal Article | Peer reviewed (PubMed) | 1 | non-invasive technique-based novel corona(covid-19) virus detection using cnn | A novel human coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) is an extremely acute respiratory syndrome which was reported in Wuhan, China in the later half 2019. Most of its primary epidemiological aspects are not appropriately known, which has a direct effect on monitoring, practices and controls. The main objective of this work is to propose a high speed, accurate and highly sensitive CT scan approach for diagnosis of COVID19. The CT scan images display several small patches of shadows and interstitial shifts, particularly in the lung periphery. The proposed method utilizes the ResNet architecture Convolution Neural Network for training the images provided by the CT scan to diagnose the coronavirus-affected patients effectively. By comparing the testing images with the training images, the affected patient is identified accurately. The accuracy and specificity are obtained 95.09% and 81.89%, respectively, on the sample dataset based on CT images without the inclusion of another set of data such as geographical location, population density, etc. Also, the sensitivity is obtained 100% in this method. Based on the results, it is evident that the COVID-19 positive patients can be classified perfectly by using the proposed method. | 187 | COVID-19;Syndrome | 5 | Natl Acad Sci Lett | Other Topics | 0.000002 | 21.192 | 0.000002 | 65 | 0 | External | 2. Detection/Diagnosis | X-Ray |
2011.00631 | null | Yes | null | null | 2,020 | 2020-11-01 | Preprint | arXiv | 0 | bifurcated autoencoder for segmentation of covid-19 infected regions in ct images | The new coronavirus infection has shocked the world since early 2020 with its aggressive outbreak. Rapid detection of the disease saves lives, and relying on medical imaging (Computed Tomography and X-ray) to detect infected lungs has shown to be effective. Deep learning and convolutional neural networks have been used for image analysis in this context. However, accurate identification of infected regions has proven challenging for two main reasons. Firstly, the characteristics of infected areas differ in different images. Secondly, insufficient training data makes it challenging to train various machine learning algorithms, including deep-learning models. This paper proposes an approach to segment lung regions infected by COVID-19 to help cardiologists diagnose the disease more accurately, faster, and more manageable. We propose a bifurcated 2-D model for two types of segmentation. This model uses a shared encoder and a bifurcated connection to two separate decoders. One decoder is for segmentation of the healthy region of the lungs, while the other is for the segmentation of the infected regions. Experiments on publically available images show that the bifurcated structure segments infected regions of the lungs better than state of the art. | 188 | COVID-19;Coronavirus Infections | null | null | Coronavirus Infections;Art;Algorithms;Disease Outbreaks;Tomography;Lung Diseases | null | null | null | null | null | External | 2. Detection/Diagnosis | CT |
33571095 | 10.1109/TNNLS.2021.3054306 | Yes | null | 33,571,095 | 2,021 | 2021-02-12 | Journal Article | Peer reviewed (PubMed) | 1 | an uncertainty-aware transfer learning-based framework for covid-19 diagnosis | The early and reliable detection of COVID-19 infected patients is essential to prevent and limit its outbreak. The PCR tests for COVID-19 detection are not available in many countries, and also, there are genuine concerns about their reliability and performance. Motivated by these shortcomings, this article proposes a deep uncertainty-aware transfer learning framework for COVID-19 detection using medical images. Four popular convolutional neural networks (CNNs), including VGG16, ResNet50, DenseNet121, and InceptionResNetV2, are first applied to extract deep features from chest X-ray and computed tomography (CT) images. Extracted features are then processed by different machine learning and statistical modeling techniques to identify COVID-19 cases. We also calculate and report the epistemic uncertainty of classification results to identify regions where the trained models are not confident about their decisions (out of distribution problem). Comprehensive simulation results for X-ray and CT image data sets indicate that linear support vector machine and neural network models achieve the best results as measured by accuracy, sensitivity, specificity, and area under the receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve (AUC). Also, it is found that predictive uncertainty estimates are much higher for CT images compared to X-ray images. | 189 | COVID-19 | 28 | IEEE Trans Neural Netw Learn Syst | Reproducibility of Results;Transfer Learning;COVID-19 Testing;Neural Networks;Support Vector Machine;Radiography;Algorithms;Disease Outbreaks;Computer Simulation;Sensitivity and Specificity;Polymerase Chain Reaction;Tomography;ROC Curve;Area under Curve;Receiver Operating Characteristic | 0.000002 | 93.08 | 0.000005 | 205 | 0 | External | 2. Detection/Diagnosis | Multimodal |
33285482 | 10.1016/j.media.2020.101913 | Yes | PMC7689310 | 33,285,482 | 2,020 | 2020-12-08 | Journal Article;Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't | Peer reviewed (PubMed) | 1 | covid-al: the diagnosis of covid-19 with deep active learning | The efficient diagnosis of COVID-19 plays a key role in preventing the spread of this disease. The computer-aided diagnosis with deep learning methods can perform automatic detection of COVID-19 using CT scans. However, large scale annotation of CT scans is impossible because of limited time and heavy burden on the healthcare system. To meet the challenge, we propose a weakly-supervised deep active learning framework called COVID-AL to diagnose COVID-19 with CT scans and patient-level labels. The COVID-AL consists of the lung region segmentation with a 2D U-Net and the diagnosis of COVID-19 with a novel hybrid active learning strategy, which simultaneously considers sample diversity and predicted loss. With a tailor-designed 3D residual network, the proposed COVID-AL can diagnose COVID-19 efficiently and it is validated on a large CT scan dataset collected from the CC-CCII. The experimental results demonstrate that the proposed COVID-AL outperforms the state-of-the-art active learning approaches in the diagnosis of COVID-19. With only 30% of the labeled data, the COVID-AL achieves over 95% accuracy of the deep learning method using the whole dataset. The qualitative and quantitative analysis proves the effectiveness and efficiency of the proposed COVID-AL framework. | 190 | COVID-19 | 42 | Med Image Anal | Art;Health Care;Tomography;Other Topics;Lung Diseases | 0.000003 | 57.4 | 0.000004 | 143 | 0 | External | 2. Detection/Diagnosis | CT |
32599338 | 10.1016/j.cmpb.2020.105608 | Yes | PMC7831868 | 32,599,338 | 2,020 | 2020-07-01 | Journal Article | Peer reviewed (PubMed) | 1 | explainable deep learning for pulmonary disease and coronavirus covid-19 detection from x-rays | Coronavirus disease (COVID-19) is an infectious disease caused by a new virus never identified before in humans. This virus causes respiratory disease (for instance, flu) with symptoms such as cough, fever and, in severe cases, pneumonia. The test to detect the presence of this virus in humans is performed on sputum or blood samples and the outcome is generally available within a few hours or, at most, days. Analysing biomedical imaging the patient shows signs of pneumonia. In this paper, with the aim of providing a fully automatic and faster diagnosis, we propose the adoption of deep learning for COVID-19 detection from X-rays. In particular, we propose an approach composed by three phases: the first one to detect if in a chest X-ray there is the presence of a pneumonia. The second one to discern between COVID-19 and pneumonia. The last step is aimed to localise the areas in the X-ray symptomatic of the COVID-19 presence. Experimental analysis on 6,523 chest X-rays belonging to different institutions demonstrated the effectiveness of the proposed approach, with an average time for COVID-19 detection of approximately 2.5 seconds and an average accuracy equal to 0.97. | 191 | COVID-19;Communicable Diseases;Cough;Fever;Lung Diseases;Pneumonia;Respiratory Tract Diseases | 182 | Comput Methods Programs Biomed | Coronavirus Infections;Transfer Learning;Algorithms;Image Processing;Lung;Neural Networks;Communicable Diseases | 0.000006 | 133.528 | 0.000008 | 339 | 0 | External | 2. Detection/Diagnosis | X-Ray |
34056622 | 10.1007/s42979-021-00690-w | Yes | PMC8144280 | 34,056,622 | 2,021 | 2021-06-01 | Journal Article | Peer reviewed (PubMed) | 1 | automated covid-19 detection from chest x-ray images: a high-resolution network (hrnet) approach | The pandemic, originated by novel coronavirus 2019 (COVID-19), continuing its devastating effect on the health, well-being, and economy of the global population. A critical step to restrain this pandemic is the early detection of COVID-19 in the human body to constraint the exposure and control the spread of the virus. Chest X-Rays are one of the non-invasive tools to detect this disease as the manual PCR diagnosis process is quite tedious and time-consuming. Our intensive background studies show that, the works till now are not efficient to produce an unbiased detection result. In this work, we proposed an automated COVID-19 classification method, utilizing available COVID and non-COVID X-Ray datasets, along with High-Resolution Network (HRNet) for feature extraction embedding with the UNet for segmentation purposes. To evaluate the proposed method, several baseline experiments have been performed employing numerous deep learning architectures. With extensive experiment, we got a significant result of 99.26% accuracy, 98.53% sensitivity, and 98.82% specificity with HRNet which surpasses the performances of the existing models. Finally, we conclude that our proposed methodology ensures unbiased high accuracy, which increases the probability of incorporating X-Ray images into the diagnosis of the disease. | 191 | COVID-19 | 7 | SN Comput Sci | Health Care;Sensitivity and Specificity;Polymerase Chain Reaction;Other Topics | 0.000001 | 10.2 | 0.000001 | 25 | 0 | External | 2. Detection/Diagnosis | X-Ray |
33330341 | 10.3389/fpubh.2020.599550 | Yes | PMC7714903 | 33,330,341 | 2,020 | 2020-12-18 | Journal Article | Peer reviewed (PubMed) | 1 | analysis of covid-19 infections on a ct image using deepsense model | In this paper, a data mining model on a hybrid deep learning framework is designed to diagnose the medical conditions of patients infected with the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) virus. The hybrid deep learning model is designed as a combination of convolutional neural network (CNN) and recurrent neural network (RNN) and named as DeepSense method. It is designed as a series of layers to extract and classify the related features of COVID-19 infections from the lungs. The computerized tomography image is used as an input data, and hence, the classifier is designed to ease the process of classification on learning the multidimensional input data using the Expert Hidden layers. The validation of the model is conducted against the medical image datasets to predict the infections using deep learning classifiers. The results show that the DeepSense classifier offers accuracy in an improved manner than the conventional deep and machine learning classifiers. The proposed method is validated against three different datasets, where the training data are compared with 70%, 80%, and 90% training data. It specifically provides the quality of the diagnostic method adopted for the prediction of COVID-19 infections in a patient. | 191 | COVID-19;Infections | 6 | Front Public Health | Sensitivity and Specificity;Neural Networks | 0.000007 | 135.624 | 0.000008 | 353 | 0 | External | 2. Detection/Diagnosis | CT |
32834651 | 10.1016/j.chaos.2020.110170 | Yes | PMC7388764 | 32,834,651 | 2,020 | 2020-08-25 | Journal Article | Peer reviewed (PubMed) | 1 | diagnosis and detection of infected tissue of covid-19 patients based on lung x-ray image using convolutional neural network approaches | COVID-19 pandemic has challenged the world science. The international community tries to find, apply, or design novel methods for diagnosis and treatment of COVID-19 patients as soon as possible. Currently, a reliable method for the diagnosis of infected patients is a reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction. The method is expensive and time-consuming. Therefore, designing novel methods is important. In this paper, we used three deep learning-based methods for the detection and diagnosis of COVID-19 patients with the use of X-Ray images of lungs. For the diagnosis of the disease, we presented two algorithms include deep neural network (DNN) on the fractal feature of images and convolutional neural network (CNN) methods with the use of the lung images, directly. Results classification shows that the presented CNN architecture with higher accuracy and sensitivity is outperforming than the DNN method with an accuracy of 83.4% and sensitivity of 86%. In the segmentation process, we presented a CNN architecture to find infected tissue in lung images. Results show that the presented method can almost detect infected regions with high accuracy of 83.84%. This finding also can be used to monitor and control patients from infected region growth. | 192 | COVID-19;COVID-19 Pandemic | 83 | Chaos Solitons Fractals | Polymerase Chain Reaction;Reverse Transcription | 0.000005 | 54.992 | 0.000004 | 138 | 0 | External | 2. Detection/Diagnosis | CT |
2004.13122 | null | Yes | null | null | 2,020 | 2020-04-24 | Preprint | arXiv | 0 | development of a machine-learning system to classify lung ct scan images into normal/covid-19 class | Recently, the lung infection due to Coronavirus Disease (COVID-19) affected a large human group worldwide and the assessment of the infection rate in the lung is essential for treatment planning. This research aims to propose a Machine-Learning-System (MLS) to detect the COVID-19 infection using the CT scan Slices (CTS). This MLS implements a sequence of methods, such as multi-thresholding, image separation using threshold filter, feature-extraction, feature-selection, feature-fusion and classification. The initial part implements the Chaotic-Bat-Algorithm and Kapur's Entropy (CBA+KE) thresholding to enhance the CTS. The threshold filter separates the image into two segments based on a chosen threshold 'Th'. The texture features of these images are extracted, refined and selected using the chosen procedures. Finally, a two-class classifier system is implemented to categorize the chosen CTS (n=500 with a pixel dimension of 512x512x1) into normal/COVID-19 group. In this work, the classifiers, such as Naive Bayes (NB), k-Nearest Neighbors (KNN), Decision Tree (DT), Random Forest (RF) and Support Vector Machine with linear kernel (SVM) are implemented and the classification task is performed using various feature vectors. The experimental outcome of the SVM with Fused-Feature-Vector (FFV) helped to attain a detection accuracy of 89.80%. | 192 | COVID-19;Infections | null | null | Humans;Other Topics;Entropy;Decision Trees;Support Vector Machine | null | null | null | null | null | External | 2. Detection/Diagnosis | CT |
33171723 | 10.3390/jpm10040213 | Yes | PMC7711996 | 33,171,723 | 2,020 | 2020-11-12 | Journal Article | Peer reviewed (PubMed) | 1 | evaluation of scalability and degree of fine-tuning of deep convolutional neural networks for covid-19 screening on chest x-ray images using explainable deep-learning algorithm | According to recent studies, patients with COVID-19 have different feature characteristics on chest X-ray (CXR) than those with other lung diseases. This study aimed at evaluating the layer depths and degree of fine-tuning on transfer learning with a deep convolutional neural network (CNN)-based COVID-19 screening in CXR to identify efficient transfer learning strategies. The CXR images used in this study were collected from publicly available repositories, and the collected images were classified into three classes: COVID-19, pneumonia, and normal. To evaluate the effect of layer depths of the same CNN architecture, CNNs called VGG-16 and VGG-19 were used as backbone networks. Then, each backbone network was trained with different degrees of fine-tuning and comparatively evaluated. The experimental results showed the highest AUC value to be 0.950 concerning COVID-19 classification in the experimental group of a fine-tuned with only 2/5 blocks of the VGG16 backbone network. In conclusion, in the classification of medical images with a limited number of data, a deeper layer depth may not guarantee better results. In addition, even if the same pre-trained CNN architecture is used, an appropriate degree of fine-tuning can help to build an efficient deep learning model. | 193 | COVID-19;Lung Diseases;Pneumonia | 19 | J Pers Med | Transfer Learning;Algorithms;Architecture;Lung;Area under Curve | 0.000006 | 112.864 | 0.000008 | 278 | 0 | External | 2. Detection/Diagnosis | X-Ray |
2004.08379 | null | Yes | null | null | 2,021 | 2021-03-05 | Preprint | arXiv | 0 | iteratively pruned deep learning ensembles for covid-19 detection in chest x-rays | We demonstrate use of iteratively pruned deep learning model ensembles for detecting pulmonary manifestation of COVID-19 with chest X-rays. This disease is caused by the novel Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) virus, also known as the novel Coronavirus (2019-nCoV). A custom convolutional neural network and a selection of ImageNet pretrained models are trained and evaluated at patient-level on publicly available CXR collections to learn modality-specific feature representations. The learned knowledge is transferred and fine-tuned to improve performance and generalization in the related task of classifying CXRs as normal, showing bacterial pneumonia, or COVID-19-viral abnormalities. The best performing models are iteratively pruned to reduce complexity and improve memory efficiency. The predictions of the best-performing pruned models are combined through different ensemble strategies to improve classification performance. Empirical evaluations demonstrate that the weighted average of the best-performing pruned models significantly improves performance resulting in an accuracy of 99.01% and area under the curve of 0.9972 in detecting COVID-19 findings on CXRs. The combined use of modality-specific knowledge transfer, iterative model pruning, and ensemble learning resulted in improved predictions. We expect that this model can be quickly adopted for COVID-19 screening using chest radiographs. | 193 | COVID-19;Pneumonia, Bacterial;Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome | null | null | Other Topics | null | null | null | null | null | External | 2. Detection/Diagnosis | X-Ray |
35054267 | 10.3390/diagnostics12010101 | Yes | PMC8774807 | 35,054,267 | 2,022 | 2022-01-22 | Journal Article | Peer reviewed (PubMed) | 1 | deep learning-based four-region lung segmentation in chest radiography for covid-19 diagnosis | Imaging plays an important role in assessing the severity of COVID-19 pneumonia. Recent COVID-19 research indicates that the disease progress propagates from the bottom of the lungs to the top. However, chest radiography (CXR) cannot directly provide a quantitative metric of radiographic opacities, and existing AI-assisted CXR analysis methods do not quantify the regional severity. In this paper, to assist the regional analysis, we developed a fully automated framework using deep learning-based four-region segmentation and detection models to assist the quantification of COVID-19 pneumonia. Specifically, a segmentation model is first applied to separate left and right lungs, and then a detection network of the carina and left hilum is used to separate upper and lower lungs. To improve the segmentation performance, an ensemble strategy with five models is exploited. We evaluated the clinical relevance of the proposed method compared with the radiographic assessment of the quality of lung edema (RALE) annotated by physicians. Mean intensities of segmented four regions indicate a positive correlation to the regional extent and density scores of pulmonary opacities based on the RALE. Therefore, the proposed method can accurately assist the quantification of regional pulmonary opacities of COVID-19 pneumonia patients. | 194 | COVID-19;Edema;Pneumonia;Rales | 5 | Diagnostics (Basel) | Other Topics | 0.000001 | 4.2 | 0.000001 | 7 | 0 | External | Segmentation-only | X-Ray |
2011.05186 | null | Yes | null | null | 2,020 | 2020-11-10 | Preprint | arXiv | 0 | pristine annotations-based multi-modal trained artificial intelligence solution to triage chest x-ray for covid-19 | The COVID-19 pandemic continues to spread and impact the well-being of the global population. The front-line modalities including computed tomography (CT) and X-ray play an important role for triaging COVID patients. Considering the limited access of resources (both hardware and trained personnel) and decontamination considerations, CT may not be ideal for triaging suspected subjects. Artificial intelligence (AI) assisted X-ray based applications for triaging and monitoring require experienced radiologists to identify COVID patients in a timely manner and to further delineate the disease region boundary are seen as a promising solution. Our proposed solution differs from existing solutions by industry and academic communities, and demonstrates a functional AI model to triage by inferencing using a single x-ray image, while the deep-learning model is trained using both X-ray and CT data. We report on how such a multi-modal training improves the solution compared to X-ray only training. The multi-modal solution increases the AUC (area under the receiver operating characteristic curve) from 0.89 to 0.93 and also positively impacts the Dice coefficient (0.59 to 0.62) for localizing the pathology. To the best our knowledge, it is the first X-ray solution by leveraging multi-modal information for the development. | 194 | COVID-19;COVID-19 Pandemic | null | null | Other Topics | null | null | null | null | null | External | 2. Detection/Diagnosis | Multimodal |
34770423 | 10.3390/s21217116 | Yes | PMC8587284 | 34,770,423 | 2,021 | 2021-11-14 | Journal Article | Peer reviewed (PubMed) | 1 | impact of lung segmentation on the diagnosis and explanation of covid-19 in chest x-ray images | COVID-19 frequently provokes pneumonia, which can be diagnosed using imaging exams. Chest X-ray (CXR) is often useful because it is cheap, fast, widespread, and uses less radiation. Here, we demonstrate the impact of lung segmentation in COVID-19 identification using CXR images and evaluate which contents of the image influenced the most. Semantic segmentation was performed using a U-Net CNN architecture, and the classification using three CNN architectures (VGG, ResNet, and Inception). Explainable Artificial Intelligence techniques were employed to estimate the impact of segmentation. A three-classes database was composed: lung opacity (pneumonia), COVID-19, and normal. We assessed the impact of creating a CXR image database from different sources, and the COVID-19 generalization from one source to another. The segmentation achieved a Jaccard distance of 0.034 and a Dice coefficient of 0.982. The classification using segmented images achieved an F1-Score of 0.88 for the multi-class setup, and 0.83 for COVID-19 identification. In the cross-dataset scenario, we obtained an F1-Score of 0.74 and an area under the ROC curve of 0.9 for COVID-19 identification using segmented images. Experiments support the conclusion that even after segmentation, there is a strong bias introduced by underlying factors from different sources. | 194 | COVID-19;Pneumonia | 32 | Sensors (Basel) | Semantics;Bias;Other Topics;ROC Curve | 0.000002 | 70.4 | 0.000005 | 148 | 0 | External | 2. Detection/Diagnosis | X-Ray |
33560995 | 10.1109/JBHI.2021.3058293 | Yes | PMC8545167 | 33,560,995 | 2,021 | 2021-02-10 | Journal Article | Peer reviewed (PubMed) | 1 | multiscale attention guided network for covid-19 diagnosis using chest x-ray images | Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) is one of the most destructive pandemic after millennium, forcing the world to tackle a health crisis. Automated lung infections classification using chest X-ray (CXR) images could strengthen diagnostic capability when handling COVID-19. However, classifying COVID-19 from pneumonia cases using CXR image is a difficult task because of shared spatial characteristics, high feature variation and contrast diversity between cases. Moreover, massive data collection is impractical for a newly emerged disease, which limited the performance of data thirsty deep learning models. To address these challenges, Multiscale Attention Guided deep network with Soft Distance regularization (MAG-SD) is proposed to automatically classify COVID-19 from pneumonia CXR images. In MAG-SD, MA-Net is used to produce prediction vector and attention from multiscale feature maps. To improve the robustness of trained model and relieve the shortage of training data, attention guided augmentations along with a soft distance regularization are posed, which aims at generating meaningful augmentations and reduce noise. Our multiscale attention model achieves better classification performance on our pneumonia CXR image dataset. Plentiful experiments are proposed for MAG-SD which demonstrates its unique advantage in pneumonia classification over cutting-edge models. The code is available at GitHub | 194 | COVID-19;Infections;Pneumonia | 15 | IEEE J Biomed Health Inform | Radiography;Health;Noise;Attention;Collection;Lung Diseases;Map | 0.000001 | 38.36 | 0.000003 | 81 | 0 | External | 2. Detection/Diagnosis | X-Ray |
End of preview. Expand
in Dataset Viewer.
README.md exists but content is empty.
Use the Edit dataset card button to edit it.
- Downloads last month
- 40