Abstract

This paper developed a novel melanoma diagnosis model from dermoscopy images using a novel hybrid model. Melanoma is the most dangerous and rarest type of skin cancer. It is seen because of the uncontrolled proliferation of melanocyte cells that give color to the skin. Dermoscopy is a critical auxiliary diagnostic method in the differentiation of pigmented moles, which show moles by magnifying 10–20 times from skin cancers. This paper proposes a multi-stage melanoma recognition framework withskin lesion images obtained from dermoscopy. This model developed a practical pre-processing approach that includes dilation andpooling layers to remove hair details and reveal details in dermoscopy images. A deep residual neural network was then utilized as the feature extractor for processed images.Additionally, the Relief algorithm selected practical and distinctive features from these features. Finally, these selected features were fed to the input of the support vector machine (SVM) classifier. In addition, the Bayesian optimization algorithm was used for the optimum parameter selection of the SVM method. The International Skin Imaging Collaboration (ISIC-2019 and ISIC-2020) datasets were used to test the performance of the proposed model. As a result, the proposed model produced approximately 99% accuracy forclassifying melanoma or benign from skin lesion images. These results show that the proposed model can help physicians to automatically identify melanoma based on dermatological imaging.

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