• IEEE J Biomed Health Inform · Oct 2020

    Automatic Lung Nodule Detection Combined With Gaze Information Improves Radiologists' Screening Performance.

    • Guilherme Aresta, Carlos Ferreira, Joao Pedrosa, Teresa Araujo, Joao Rebelo, Eduardo Negrao, Margarida Morgado, Filipe Alves, Antonio Cunha, Isabel Ramos, and Aurelio Campilho.
    • IEEE J Biomed Health Inform. 2020 Oct 1; 24 (10): 2894-2901.

    AbstractEarly diagnosis of lung cancer via computed tomography can significantly reduce the morbidity and mortality rates associated with the pathology. However, searching lung nodules is a high complexity task, which affects the success of screening programs. Whilst computer-aided detection systems can be used as second observers, they may bias radiologists and introduce significant time overheads. With this in mind, this study assesses the potential of using gaze information for integrating automatic detection systems in the clinical practice. For that purpose, 4 radiologists were asked to annotate 20 scans from a public dataset while being monitored by an eye tracker device, and an automatic lung nodule detection system was developed. Our results show that radiologists follow a similar search routine and tend to have lower fixation periods in regions where finding errors occur. The overall detection sensitivity of the specialists was 0.67±0.07, whereas the system achieved 0.69. Combining the annotations of one radiologist with the automatic system significantly improves the detection performance to similar levels of two annotators. Filtering automatic detection candidates only for low fixation regions still significantly improves the detection sensitivity without increasing the number of false-positives.

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