Double-Shot Transfer Learning for Breast Cancer Classification from X-Ray Images

Differentiation between benign and malignant breast cancer cases in X-ray images can be difficult due to their similar features. In recent studies, the transfer learning technique has been used to classify benign and malignant breast cancer by fine-tuning various pre-trained networks such as AlexNet...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Mohammad Alkhaleefah, Shang-Chih Ma, Yang-Lang Chang, Bormin Huang, Praveen Kumar Chittem, Vishnu Priya Achhannagari
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-06-01
Series:Applied Sciences
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Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2076-3417/10/11/3999
Description
Summary:Differentiation between benign and malignant breast cancer cases in X-ray images can be difficult due to their similar features. In recent studies, the transfer learning technique has been used to classify benign and malignant breast cancer by fine-tuning various pre-trained networks such as AlexNet, visual geometry group (VGG), GoogLeNet, and residual network (ResNet) on breast cancer datasets. However, these pre-trained networks have been trained on large benchmark datasets such as ImageNet, which do not contain labeled images related to breast cancers which lead to poor performance. In this research, we introduce a novel technique based on the concept of transfer learning, called double-shot transfer learning (DSTL). DSTL is used to improve the overall accuracy and performance of the pre-trained networks for breast cancer classification. DSTL updates the learnable parameters (weights and biases) of any pre-trained network by fine-tuning them on a large dataset that is similar to the target dataset. Then, the updated networks are fine-tuned with the target dataset. Moreover, the number of X-ray images is enlarged by a combination of augmentation methods including different variations of rotation, brightness, flipping, and contrast to reduce overfitting and produce robust results. The proposed approach has demonstrated a significant improvement in classification accuracy and performance of the pre-trained networks, making them more suitable for medical imaging.
ISSN:2076-3417