TXI: Texture and Color Enhancement Imaging for Endoscopic Image Enhancement

Recognition of lesions with subtle morphological and/or color changes during white light imaging (WLI) endoscopy remains a challenge. Often the endoscopic image suffers from nonuniform illumination across the image due to curvature in the lumen and the direction of the illumination light of the endo...

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Main Author: Tomoya Sato
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Hindawi Limited 2021-01-01
Series:Journal of Healthcare Engineering
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2021/5518948
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spelling doaj-418624232c154d42aef7cf5847430f822021-04-19T00:04:23ZengHindawi LimitedJournal of Healthcare Engineering2040-23092021-01-01202110.1155/2021/5518948TXI: Texture and Color Enhancement Imaging for Endoscopic Image EnhancementTomoya Sato0Department of Advanced Imaging System TechnologyRecognition of lesions with subtle morphological and/or color changes during white light imaging (WLI) endoscopy remains a challenge. Often the endoscopic image suffers from nonuniform illumination across the image due to curvature in the lumen and the direction of the illumination light of the endoscope. We propose an image enhancement technology to resolve the drawbacks above called texture and color enhancement imaging (TXI). TXI is designed to enhance three image factors in WLI (texture, brightness, and color) in order to clearly define subtle tissue differences. In our proposed method, retinex-based enhancement is employed in the chain of endoscopic image processing. Retinex-based enhancement is combined with color enhancement to greatly accentuate color tone differences of mucosal surfaces. We apply TXI to animal endoscopic images and evaluate the performance of TXI compared with conventional endoscopic enhancement technologies, conventionally used techniques for real-world image processing, and newly proposed techniques for surgical endoscopic image augmentation. Our experimental results show that TXI can enhance brightness selectively in dark areas of an endoscopic image and can enhance subtle tissue differences such as slight morphological or color changes while simultaneously preventing over-enhancement. These experimental results demonstrate the potential of the proposed TXI algorithm as a future clinical tool for detecting gastrointestinal lesions having difficult-to-recognize tissue differences.http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2021/5518948
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Tomoya Sato
spellingShingle Tomoya Sato
TXI: Texture and Color Enhancement Imaging for Endoscopic Image Enhancement
Journal of Healthcare Engineering
author_facet Tomoya Sato
author_sort Tomoya Sato
title TXI: Texture and Color Enhancement Imaging for Endoscopic Image Enhancement
title_short TXI: Texture and Color Enhancement Imaging for Endoscopic Image Enhancement
title_full TXI: Texture and Color Enhancement Imaging for Endoscopic Image Enhancement
title_fullStr TXI: Texture and Color Enhancement Imaging for Endoscopic Image Enhancement
title_full_unstemmed TXI: Texture and Color Enhancement Imaging for Endoscopic Image Enhancement
title_sort txi: texture and color enhancement imaging for endoscopic image enhancement
publisher Hindawi Limited
series Journal of Healthcare Engineering
issn 2040-2309
publishDate 2021-01-01
description Recognition of lesions with subtle morphological and/or color changes during white light imaging (WLI) endoscopy remains a challenge. Often the endoscopic image suffers from nonuniform illumination across the image due to curvature in the lumen and the direction of the illumination light of the endoscope. We propose an image enhancement technology to resolve the drawbacks above called texture and color enhancement imaging (TXI). TXI is designed to enhance three image factors in WLI (texture, brightness, and color) in order to clearly define subtle tissue differences. In our proposed method, retinex-based enhancement is employed in the chain of endoscopic image processing. Retinex-based enhancement is combined with color enhancement to greatly accentuate color tone differences of mucosal surfaces. We apply TXI to animal endoscopic images and evaluate the performance of TXI compared with conventional endoscopic enhancement technologies, conventionally used techniques for real-world image processing, and newly proposed techniques for surgical endoscopic image augmentation. Our experimental results show that TXI can enhance brightness selectively in dark areas of an endoscopic image and can enhance subtle tissue differences such as slight morphological or color changes while simultaneously preventing over-enhancement. These experimental results demonstrate the potential of the proposed TXI algorithm as a future clinical tool for detecting gastrointestinal lesions having difficult-to-recognize tissue differences.
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2021/5518948
work_keys_str_mv AT tomoyasato txitextureandcolorenhancementimagingforendoscopicimageenhancement
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