English

Bone marrow cells detection: A technique for the microscopic image analysis

Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition 2018-05-08 v1

Abstract

In the detection of myeloproliferative, the number of cells in each type of bone marrow cells (BMC) is an important parameter for the evaluation. In this study, we propose a new counting method, which also consists of three modules including localization, segmentation and classification. The localization of BMC is achieved from a color transformation enhanced BMC sample image and stepwise averaging method (SAM). In the nucleus segmentation, both SAM and Otsu's method will be applied to obtain a weighted threshold for segmenting the patch into nucleus and non-nucleus. In the cytoplasm segmentation, a color weakening transformation, an improved region growing method and the K-Means algorithm are used. The connected cells with BMC will be separated by the marker-controlled watershed algorithm. The features will be extracted for the classification after the segmentation. In this study, the BMC are classified using the SVM, Random Forest, Artificial Neural Networks, Adaboost and Bayesian Networks into five classes including one outlier, namely, neutrophilic split granulocyte, neutrophilic stab granulocyte, metarubricyte, mature lymphocytes and the outlier (all other cells not listed). Our experimental results show that the best average recognition rate is 87.49% for the SVM.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1805.02058,
  title  = {Bone marrow cells detection: A technique for the microscopic image analysis},
  author = {Haichao Cao and Hong Liu and Enmin Song},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1805.02058},
  year   = {2018}
}

Comments

11 pages, 8 figures and 4 tables

R2 v1 2026-06-23T01:45:57.298Z