Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

SPIKING NEURAL NETWORKS FOR BREAST CANCER CLASSIFICATION USING RADAR TARGET SIGNATURES

2010; The Electromagnetics Academy; Volume: 17; Linguagem: Inglês

10.2528/pierc10100202

ISSN

1937-8718

Autores

Brian McGinley, Martin O’Halloran, Raquel C. Conceição, Fearghal Morgan, Martin Glavin, Edward Jones,

Tópico(s)

Ultrasonics and Acoustic Wave Propagation

Resumo

Recent studies have shown that the dielectric properties of normal breast tissue vary considerably. This dielectric heterogeneity may mean that the identiflcation of tumours using Ultra Wideband Radar imaging alone may be quite di-cult. Signiflcantly, since the dielectric properties of benign tissue were shown to overlap with those of malignant, breast tumour classiflcation using traditional UWB Radar imaging algorithms could be very problematic. Rather than simply examining the dielectric properties of scatterers within the breast, other features of scatterers must be used for classiflcation. Radar Target Signatures have been previously used to classify tumours due to the signiflcant difierence in size, shape and surface texture between benign and malignant tumours. This paper investigates Spiking Neural Networks (SNNs) applied as a novel tumour classiflcation method. This paper will describe the creation of 3D tumour models, the generation of representative backscatter, the application of a feature extraction method and the use of SNNs to classify tumours as either benign or malignant. The performance of the SNN classifler is shown to outperform existing UWB Radar classiflcation algorithms.

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