Abstract

The structure of the retinal vascular tree can reflect many indicators of ophthalmic health status. Retinal vessel segmentation, an important basis for the quantitative analysis of vascular structure, has been developed over decades. However, in the areas of imaging quality and contrast, there are still vascular ruptures and missed detection by existing methods. Moreover, the problem of false positives caused by existing lesions has not been properly addressed. Inspired by the primary visual cortex of the biological visual system, this paper proposes Anisotropic Perceptive Convolution (APC) and Anisotropic Enhancement Module (AEM) to model visual cortex cells and their orientation selection mechanism, respectively, as well as a novel network named W-shaped Deep Matched Filtering (WS-DMF) having a W-shaped overall framework. In the feature extraction backbone, a DMF based on a multilayer aggregation of APC is designed to enhance vascular features and inhibit the expression of pathological features. In addition, AEMs are embedded into DMF to enhance the orientation and position information of high-dimensional features. Furthermore, in order to enhance the ability of APC for perceiving linear textures (such as blood vessels), an Orientation Anisotropic Loss (OAL) is introduced. Based on experiments on several widely used datasets and several professional vessel segmentation metrics, the proposed method exhibits strong abilities of vessel extraction and lesion inhibition, surpassing many state-of-the-art algorithms. The results indicate the potential value of WS-DMF in clinical practice. The source code is available at https://www.github.com/tyb311/WS-DMF.

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