DocumentCode
2737714
Title
Information processing in upper digestive endoscopy
Author
Le Guillou, C. ; Cauvin, J.-M. ; Solaiman, B. ; Robaszkiewicz, M. ; Roux, C.
Author_Institution
Dept. Image & Traitement de l´´Inf., ENST de Bretagne, Brest, France
fYear
2000
fDate
2000
Firstpage
183
Lastpage
188
Abstract
Provided with evolved functionalities, a digestive endoscopy atlas can be used as a training tool and even a diagnostic aid for “junior” endoscopists. Compared to a classic illustration of diagnoses by means of noteworthy iconography, such an atlas must in addition integrate similar-case retrieval and diagnostic hypothesis evaluation. That is why a case-based reasoning (CBR) tool, organized around two bases, one of endoscopic knowledge and one of case iconography, is well adapted to the objectives of conceiving a system that is able to improve. This paper focuses on the creation of two bases, in other words on the knowledge representation and on the iconography indexing. The concept of “scenes with objects” is useful for describing the endoscopic diagnoses as well as the images or sequences of the various cases. The endoscopic diagnosis description obviously falls within the province of an expert. He generally prefers to express uncertainty and vagueness in a qualitative form rather than in a quantitative one. Moreover, thanks to a common description mode, the knowledge base takes the place of a thesaurus, which is valuable for the indexing of cases. Classification algorithms are tested on simulated endoscopic descriptions and the results are very promising
Keywords
case-based reasoning; classification; image sequences; indexing; knowledge representation; medical expert systems; medical image processing; uncertainty handling; approximate reasoning; case iconography indexing; case-based reasoning; classification algorithms; common description mode; diagnostic aid; diagnostic hypothesis evaluation; digestive endoscopy atlas; endoscopic diagnosis description; endoscopic knowledge; image sequences; information processing; junior endoscopists; knowledge base; knowledge representation; objects; scenes; similar-case retrieval; thesaurus; training tool; uncertainty; upper digestive tract; vagueness; Biomedical imaging; Endoscopes; Image storage; Indexing; Information processing; Knowledge representation; Layout; Medical diagnostic imaging; Standardization; Terminology;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Information Technology Applications in Biomedicine, 2000. Proceedings. 2000 IEEE EMBS International Conference on
Conference_Location
Arlington, VA
Print_ISBN
0-7803-6449-X
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ITAB.2000.892383
Filename
892383
Link To Document