Linear feature selection in texture analysis - A PLS based method

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Linear feature selection in texture analysis - A PLS based method. / Marques, Joselene; Igel, Christian; Lillholm, Martin; Dam, Erik.

I: Machine Vision & Applications, Bind 24, Nr. 7, 2013, s. 1435-1444.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Marques, J, Igel, C, Lillholm, M & Dam, E 2013, 'Linear feature selection in texture analysis - A PLS based method', Machine Vision & Applications, bind 24, nr. 7, s. 1435-1444. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00138-012-0461-1

APA

Marques, J., Igel, C., Lillholm, M., & Dam, E. (2013). Linear feature selection in texture analysis - A PLS based method. Machine Vision & Applications, 24(7), 1435-1444. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00138-012-0461-1

Vancouver

Marques J, Igel C, Lillholm M, Dam E. Linear feature selection in texture analysis - A PLS based method. Machine Vision & Applications. 2013;24(7):1435-1444. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00138-012-0461-1

Author

Marques, Joselene ; Igel, Christian ; Lillholm, Martin ; Dam, Erik. / Linear feature selection in texture analysis - A PLS based method. I: Machine Vision & Applications. 2013 ; Bind 24, Nr. 7. s. 1435-1444.

Bibtex

@article{6d652fbb3590492ba09fdbd38ab3b9cd,
title = "Linear feature selection in texture analysis - A PLS based method",
abstract = "We present a texture analysis methodology that combined uncommitted machine-learning techniques and partial least square (PLS) in a fully automatic framework. Our approach introduces a robust PLS-based dimensionality reduction (DR) step to specifically address outliers and high-dimensional feature sets. The texture analysis framework was applied to diagnosis of knee osteoarthritis (OA). To classify between healthy subjects and OA patients, a generic bank of texture features was extracted from magnetic resonance images of tibial knee bone. The features were used as input to the DR algorithm, which first applied a PLS regression to rank the features and then defined the best number of features to retain in the model by an iterative learning phase. The outliers in the dataset, that could inflate the number of selected features, were eliminated by a pre-processing step. To cope with the limited number of samples, the data were evaluated using Monte Carlo cross validation (CV). The developed DR method demonstrated consistency in selecting a relatively homogeneous set of features across the CV iterations. Per each CV group, a median of 19 % of the original features was selected and considering all CV groups, the methods selected 36 % of the original features available. The diagnosis evaluation reached a generalization area-under-the-ROC curve of 0.92, which was higher than established cartilage-based markers known to relate to OA diagnosis.",
author = "Joselene Marques and Christian Igel and Martin Lillholm and Erik Dam",
year = "2013",
doi = "10.1007/s00138-012-0461-1",
language = "English",
volume = "24",
pages = "1435--1444",
journal = "Machine Vision and Applications",
issn = "0932-8092",
publisher = "Springer",
number = "7",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Linear feature selection in texture analysis - A PLS based method

AU - Marques, Joselene

AU - Igel, Christian

AU - Lillholm, Martin

AU - Dam, Erik

PY - 2013

Y1 - 2013

N2 - We present a texture analysis methodology that combined uncommitted machine-learning techniques and partial least square (PLS) in a fully automatic framework. Our approach introduces a robust PLS-based dimensionality reduction (DR) step to specifically address outliers and high-dimensional feature sets. The texture analysis framework was applied to diagnosis of knee osteoarthritis (OA). To classify between healthy subjects and OA patients, a generic bank of texture features was extracted from magnetic resonance images of tibial knee bone. The features were used as input to the DR algorithm, which first applied a PLS regression to rank the features and then defined the best number of features to retain in the model by an iterative learning phase. The outliers in the dataset, that could inflate the number of selected features, were eliminated by a pre-processing step. To cope with the limited number of samples, the data were evaluated using Monte Carlo cross validation (CV). The developed DR method demonstrated consistency in selecting a relatively homogeneous set of features across the CV iterations. Per each CV group, a median of 19 % of the original features was selected and considering all CV groups, the methods selected 36 % of the original features available. The diagnosis evaluation reached a generalization area-under-the-ROC curve of 0.92, which was higher than established cartilage-based markers known to relate to OA diagnosis.

AB - We present a texture analysis methodology that combined uncommitted machine-learning techniques and partial least square (PLS) in a fully automatic framework. Our approach introduces a robust PLS-based dimensionality reduction (DR) step to specifically address outliers and high-dimensional feature sets. The texture analysis framework was applied to diagnosis of knee osteoarthritis (OA). To classify between healthy subjects and OA patients, a generic bank of texture features was extracted from magnetic resonance images of tibial knee bone. The features were used as input to the DR algorithm, which first applied a PLS regression to rank the features and then defined the best number of features to retain in the model by an iterative learning phase. The outliers in the dataset, that could inflate the number of selected features, were eliminated by a pre-processing step. To cope with the limited number of samples, the data were evaluated using Monte Carlo cross validation (CV). The developed DR method demonstrated consistency in selecting a relatively homogeneous set of features across the CV iterations. Per each CV group, a median of 19 % of the original features was selected and considering all CV groups, the methods selected 36 % of the original features available. The diagnosis evaluation reached a generalization area-under-the-ROC curve of 0.92, which was higher than established cartilage-based markers known to relate to OA diagnosis.

U2 - 10.1007/s00138-012-0461-1

DO - 10.1007/s00138-012-0461-1

M3 - Journal article

VL - 24

SP - 1435

EP - 1444

JO - Machine Vision and Applications

JF - Machine Vision and Applications

SN - 0932-8092

IS - 7

ER -

ID: 40995496