Abstract

Capsule video endoscopy, which uses a wireless camera to visualize the digestive tract, is emerging as an alternative to traditional colonoscopy. Colonoscopy is considered as the gold standard for visualizing the colon and takes 30 frames per second. Capsule images, on the other hand, are taken with low frame rate (average five frames per second), which makes it difficult to find pathology and results in eye fatigue for viewing. In this paper, we propose a variational algorithm to smooth the video temporally and create a visually pleasant video. The main objective of the paper is to increase the frame rate to be closer to that of the colonoscopy. We propose variational energy that takes into consideration both motion estimation and intermediate frame intensity interpolation using the surrounding frames. The proposed formulation incorporates both pixel intensity and texture feature in the optical flow objective function such that the interpolation at the intermediate frame is directly modeled. The main feature of this formulation is that error in motion estimation is incorporated in our model, so that only robust motion estimation are used in estimating the intensity of the intermediate frame. We derived Euler-Lagrange equations and showed an efficient numerical scheme that can be implemented on graphics hardware. Finally, a motion compensated frame rate doubling version of our method is implemented. We evaluate the quality of both 90 and 100% of the frames for medical diagnosis domain through objective image quality metrics. Our method improves state-of-the-art result for 90% frames while performing equivalent for the remaining cases with other existing methods. In the last section, we show application of frame interpolation to informative frame segment visualization and to reduce the power consumption.

Highlights

  • Capsule video endoscopy has proven to be a powerful tool for diagnosis of the digestive tract diseases

  • 5 Results and discussion In Colon capsule video endoscopy (CCE) frames interpolation, the smoothness of the output video must be taken into account and the quality of the interpolated frame for diagnosis

  • 6 Conclusion In this paper, we discussed the limitation of the current CCE videos regarding low frame rates

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Summary

Introduction

Capsule video endoscopy has proven to be a powerful tool for diagnosis of the digestive tract diseases. Colon capsule video endoscopy (CCE) has been used to diagnose inflammatory bowel disease [1] (i.e., Chron’s disease and ulcerative colitis), gastrointestinal bleeding, and polyps. Since it is less invasive than colonoscopy, it might increase participation in colorectal cancer screening. There are two general steps for frame interpolation These are motion estimation and motion compensation, respectively. Keller et al [10] proposed a variational method for both optical flow calculation (motion estimation) and the actual new frame interpolation (motion compensation). Motion vectors are computed using TV-L1 energy, and interpolated frame is computed by averaging the warped flow to current and previous frame. Once motion vectors are computed, motion compensation is used to estimate the intermediate frame as follows:

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