Abstract

The brain assumes the role of the primary organ in the human body, serving as the ultimate controller and regulator. Nevertheless, certain instances may give rise to the development of malignant tumors within the brain. At present, a definitive explanation of the etiology of brain cancer has yet to be established. This study develops a model that can accurately identify the presence of a tumor in a given magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scan and subsequently determine its size within the brain. The proposed methodology comprises a two-step process, namely, tumor extraction and measurement (segmentation), followed by the application of deep learning techniques for the identification and classification of brain tumors. The detection and measurement of a brain tumor involve a series of steps, namely, preprocessing, skull stripping, and tumor segmentation. The overfitting of BTNet-convolutional neural network (CNN) models occurs after a lot of training time because training the model with a large number of images. Moreover, the tuned CNN model shows a better performance for classification step by achieving an accuracy rate of 98%. The performance metrics imply that the BTNet model can reach the optimal classification accuracy for the brain tumor (BraTS 2020) dataset identification. The model analysis segment has a WT specificity of 0.97, a TC specificity of 0.925914, an ET specificity of 0.967717, and Dice scores of 79.73% for ET, 91.64% for WT, and 87.73% for TC.

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