Abstract

Lung disease is a respiratory disease that poses a high risk to people worldwide and includes pneumonia and COVID-19. As such, quick and precise identification of lung disease is vital in medical treatment. Early detection and diagnosis can significantly reduce the life-threatening nature of lung diseases and improve the quality of life of human beings. Chest X-ray and computed tomography (CT) scan images are currently the best techniques to detect and diagnose lung infection. The increase in the chest X-ray or CT scan images at the time of training addresses the overfitting dilemma, and multi-class classification of lung diseases will deal with meaningful information and overfitting. Overfitting deteriorates the performance of the model and gives inaccurate results. This study reduces the overfitting issue and computational complexity by proposing a new enhanced kernel convolution function. Alongside an enhanced kernel convolution function, this study used convolution neural network (CNN) models to determine pneumonia and COVID-19. Each CNN model was applied to the collected dataset to extract the features and later applied these features as input to the classification models. This study shows that extracting deep features from the common layers of the CNN models increased the performance of the classification procedure. The multi-class classification improves the diagnostic performance, and the evaluation metrics improved significantly with the improved support vector machine (SVM). The best results were obtained using the improved SVM classifier fed with the features provided by CNN, and the success rate of the improved SVM was 99.8%.

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