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Ensemble of adapted convolutional neural networks (CNN) methods for classifying colon histopathological images

PeerJ Comput Sci. 2022 Jul 5:8:e1031. doi: 10.7717/peerj-cs.1031. eCollection 2022.

Abstract

Deep convolutional neural networks (CNN) manifest the potential for computer-aided diagnosis systems (CADs) by learning features directly from images rather than using traditional feature extraction methods. Nevertheless, due to the limited sample sizes and heterogeneity in tumor presentation in medical images, CNN models suffer from training issues, including training from scratch, which leads to overfitting. Alternatively, a pre-trained neural network's transfer learning (TL) is used to derive tumor knowledge from medical image datasets using CNN that were designed for non-medical activations, alleviating the need for large datasets. This study proposes two ensemble learning techniques: E-CNN (product rule) and E-CNN (majority voting). These techniques are based on the adaptation of the pretrained CNN models to classify colon cancer histopathology images into various classes. In these ensembles, the individuals are, initially, constructed by adapting pretrained DenseNet121, MobileNetV2, InceptionV3, and VGG16 models. The adaptation of these models is based on a block-wise fine-tuning policy, in which a set of dense and dropout layers of these pretrained models is joined to explore the variation in the histology images. Then, the models' decisions are fused via product rule and majority voting aggregation methods. The proposed model was validated against the standard pretrained models and the most recent works on two publicly available benchmark colon histopathological image datasets: Stoean (357 images) and Kather colorectal histology (5,000 images). The results were 97.20% and 91.28% accurate, respectively. The achieved results outperformed the state-of-the-art studies and confirmed that the proposed E-CNNs could be extended to be used in various medical image applications.

Keywords: Block-wise fine-tuning; Colon cancer classification; Deep convolutional neural networks; Ensemble learning; Histopathological Images; Transfer learning.

Grants and funding

This research was financed by a grant from the Deanship of Scientific Research and Innovation at Al-Balqa Applied University (Al-Salt-Jordan) for supporting this study (Grant agreement number: DSR-2020#335). The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.