Abstract

This study describes the development of a convolutional neural network (CNN) for automated assessment of optic disc photograph quality. Using a code-free deep learning platform, a total of 2377 optic disc photographs were used to develop a deep CNN capable of determining optic disc photograph quality. Of these, 1002 were good-quality images, 609 were acceptable-quality, and 766 were poor-quality images. The dataset was split 80/10/10 into training, validation, and test sets and balanced for quality. A ternary classification model (good, acceptable, and poor quality) and a binary model (usable, unusable) were developed. In the ternary classification system, the model had an overall accuracy of 91% and an AUC of 0.98. The model had higher predictive accuracy for images of good (93%) and poor quality (96%) than for images of acceptable quality (91%). The binary model performed with an overall accuracy of 98% and an AUC of 0.99. When validated on 292 images not included in the original training/validation/test dataset, the model's accuracy was 85% on the three-class classification task and 97% on the binary classification task. The proposed system for automated image-quality assessment for optic disc photographs achieves high accuracy in both ternary and binary classification systems, and highlights the success achievable with a code-free platform. There is wide clinical and research potential for such a model, with potential applications ranging from integration into fundus camera software to provide immediate feedback to ophthalmic photographers, to prescreening large databases before their use in research.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call