City
Epaper

AI can improve CT screening for COVID-19 diagnosis

By IANS | Updated: August 11, 2020 15:39 IST

New York, Aug 11 Researchers are developing a new technique using Artificial Intelligence (AI) that would improve CT screening ...

Open in App

New York, Aug 11 Researchers are developing a new technique using Artificial Intelligence (AI) that would improve CT screening to more quickly identify patients infected with COVID-19.

The new technique will reduce the burden on the radiologists tasked with screening each image, according to a research team from the University of Notre Dame in the US.

Testing challenges have led to an influx of patients hospitalised with COVID-19 requiring CT scans which have revealed visual signs of the disease, including ground-glass opacities, a condition that consists of abnormal lesions, presenting as a haziness on images of the lungs.

"Most patients with coronavirus show signs of Covid-related pneumonia on a chest CT but with a large number of suspected cases, radiologists are working overtime to screen them all," said study lead author Yiyu Shi from the Notre Dame.

"We have shown that we can use deep learning a field of AI to identify those signs, drastically speeding up the screening process and reducing the burden on radiologists," Yiyu added.

The research team is working to identify the visual features of coronavirus-related pneumonia through analysis of 3D data from CT scans.

The team is working to combine the analysis software with off-the-shelf hardware for a light-weight mobile device that can be easily and immediately integrated in clinics around the country.

The challenge, Shi said, is that 3D CT scans are so large, it's nearly impossible to detect specific features and extract them efficiently and accurately on plug-and-play mobile devices.

"We're developing a novel method inspired by Independent Component Analysis, using a statistical architecture to break each image into smaller segments, which will allow deep neural networks to target Covid-related features within large 3D images," Shi wrote.

The research team is collaborating with radiologists at Guangdong Provincial People's Hospital in China and the University of Pittsburgh Medical Centre, where a large number of CT images from COVID-19 pneumonia are being made available.

The team hopes to have development completed by the end of the year.

 

( With inputs from IANS )

Open in App

Related Stories

NationalSchools shut across Uttarakhand as torrential rainfall wreaks havoc  

NationalPM Modi to inaugurate MS Swaminathan Centenary global conference today

BusinessTrump's additional 25% tariff on Indian goods may now hit India's GDP growth in FY26 by 0.4%: Economists

InternationalSouth Korea, US to partially push back field training for key military drills to Sept

InternationalUS in Race With China to Claim 'Best' Part of Moon: NASA Chief

Technology Realted Stories

TechnologyNearly $30 billion in Indian exports secure from Trump's 50 pc tariff so far

TechnologyTRAI issues advisory on fraudulent activities misusing its name

TechnologySTPI’s expansion spurs IT growth in India's non-metro cities, boosts exports and jobs

TechnologyCentre approves over Rs 304 crore for R&D in 5G and 6G technologies: Minister

TechnologyBlack scorpion sting injects 25 distinct deadly toxins: IASST study