Abdesslam Benzinou

LG
3papers
12citations
Novelty28%
AI Score32

3 Papers

IVJun 24, 2022
Placental Vessel Segmentation and Registration in Fetoscopy: Literature Review and MICCAI FetReg2021 Challenge Findings

Sophia Bano, Alessandro Casella, Francisco Vasconcelos et al.

Fetoscopy laser photocoagulation is a widely adopted procedure for treating Twin-to-Twin Transfusion Syndrome (TTTS). The procedure involves photocoagulation pathological anastomoses to regulate blood exchange among twins. The procedure is particularly challenging due to the limited field of view, poor manoeuvrability of the fetoscope, poor visibility, and variability in illumination. These challenges may lead to increased surgery time and incomplete ablation. Computer-assisted intervention (CAI) can provide surgeons with decision support and context awareness by identifying key structures in the scene and expanding the fetoscopic field of view through video mosaicking. Research in this domain has been hampered by the lack of high-quality data to design, develop and test CAI algorithms. Through the Fetoscopic Placental Vessel Segmentation and Registration (FetReg2021) challenge, which was organized as part of the MICCAI2021 Endoscopic Vision challenge, we released the first largescale multicentre TTTS dataset for the development of generalized and robust semantic segmentation and video mosaicking algorithms. For this challenge, we released a dataset of 2060 images, pixel-annotated for vessels, tool, fetus and background classes, from 18 in-vivo TTTS fetoscopy procedures and 18 short video clips. Seven teams participated in this challenge and their model performance was assessed on an unseen test dataset of 658 pixel-annotated images from 6 fetoscopic procedures and 6 short clips. The challenge provided an opportunity for creating generalized solutions for fetoscopic scene understanding and mosaicking. In this paper, we present the findings of the FetReg2021 challenge alongside reporting a detailed literature review for CAI in TTTS fetoscopy. Through this challenge, its analysis and the release of multi-centre fetoscopic data, we provide a benchmark for future research in this field.

LGNov 17, 2022
Deep learning for Lagrangian drift simulation at the sea surface

Daria Botvynko, Carlos Granero-Belinchon, Simon Van Gennip et al.

We address Lagrangian drift simulation in geophysical dynamics and explore deep learning approaches to overcome known limitations of state-of-the-art model-based and Markovian approaches in terms of computational complexity and error propagation. We introduce a novel architecture, referred to as DriftNet, inspired from the Eulerian Fokker-Planck representation of Lagrangian dynamics. Numerical experiments for Lagrangian drift simulation at the sea surface demonstrates the relevance of DriftNet w.r.t. state-of-the-art schemes. Benefiting from the fully-convolutional nature of Drift-Net, we explore through a neural inversion how to diagnose modelderived velocities w.r.t. real drifter trajectories.

AO-PHMar 27
Impact of geophysical fields on Deep Learning-based Lagrangian drift simulations

Daria Botvynko, Carlos Granero-Belinchon, Simon Van Gennip et al.

We assess the influence of different Eulerian geophysical input fields on Lagrangian drift simulations using DriftNet, a learning-based method designed to simulate Lagrangian drift on the sea surface. Two experiments are conducted: a fully numerical experiment (Benchmark B1) and a real-world drifters-based experiment (Benchmark B2). Both experiments are performed in two regions with different ocean dynamics: North East Pacific and Gulf Stream regions. The performance of DrifNet is evaluated with three different metrics: separation distance between simulated and ground-truth trajectories, the normalized cumulative Lagrangian separation and the autocorrelation of Lagrangian velocities. In both regions, results from B1 show that combining assimilated sea surface currents (SSC) with fully observed sea surface height (SSH) leads to greatest improvement in trajectory simulation. This configuration reduces separation distance by over 50\% and significantly decreases normalized cumulative Lagrangian separation and metrics related to velocities autocorrelation functions compared to the baseline using SSC alone. On the other hand, the inclusion of sea surface temperature (SST) either alone or in combination with SSC generally degrades performance. In B2, using satellite-derived SSH, Ekman and winds velocities improves surface drifters trajectories simulation, particularly in the North East Pacific. While the satellite-derived SST in combination with reanalysis-based SSC configuration leads to better trajectories simulation in the Gulf Stream. Overall, we highlight the added value of combining multiple geophysical fields to improve Lagrangian drift simulation on both numerical and real-world experiments.