CVIVTOFeb 16, 2019

Atlas-based automated detection of swim bladder in Medaka embryo

arXiv:1902.06130v1
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

This work addresses the need for efficient toxicity assessment in fish embryo models, but it is incremental as it applies existing segmentation and classification methods to a specific biological task.

The paper tackled the problem of automatically detecting the swim bladder in Medaka fish embryos from 2D images, achieving an average precision rate of 95% on a dataset of 261 images.

Fish embryo models are increasingly being used both for the assessment of chemicals efficacy and potential toxicity. This article proposes a methodology to automatically detect the swim bladder on 2D images of Medaka fish embryos seen either in dorsal view or in lateral view. After embryo segmentation and for each studied orientation, the method builds an atlas of a healthy embryo. This atlas is then used to define the region of interest and to guide the swim bladder segmentation with a discrete globally optimal active contour. Descriptors are subsequently designed from this segmentation. An automated random forest clas-sifier is built from these descriptors in order to classify embryos with and without a swim bladder. The proposed method is assessed on a dataset of 261 images, containing 202 embryos with a swim bladder (where 196 are in dorsal view and 6 are in lateral view) and 59 without (where 43 are in dorsal view and 16 are in lateral view). We obtain an average precision rate of 95% in the total dataset following 5-fold cross-validation.

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