4.7 Article

New segmentation and feature extraction algorithm for classification of white blood cells in peripheral smear images

Journal

SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
Volume 11, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-98599-0

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This article introduces a new method for classifying white blood cells using image processing and machine learning, involving nucleus and cytoplasm detection, feature extraction, and classification. The proposed method performs well on multiple datasets and demonstrates better generalization ability compared to traditional models.
This article addresses a new method for the classification of white blood cells (WBCs) using image processing techniques and machine learning methods. The proposed method consists of three steps: detecting the nucleus and cytoplasm, extracting features, and classification. At first, a new algorithm is designed to segment the nucleus. For the cytoplasm to be detected, only a part of it located inside the convex hull of the nucleus is involved in the process. This attitude helps us overcome the difficulties of segmenting the cytoplasm. In the second phase, three shapes and four novel color features are devised and extracted. Finally, by using an SVM model, the WBCs are classified. The segmentation algorithm can detect the nucleus with a dice similarity coefficient of 0.9675. The proposed method can categorize WBCs in Raabin-WBC, LISC, and BCCD datasets with accuracies of 94.65%, 92.21%, and 94.20%, respectively. Besides, we show that the proposed method possesses more generalization power than pre-trained CNN models. It is worth mentioning that the hyperparameters of the classifier are fixed only with the Raabin-WBC dataset, and these parameters are not readjusted for LISC and BCCD datasets.

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