Volume 13, Issue 1 pp. 62-72

A relative color approach to color discrimination for malignant melanoma detection in dermoscopy images

R. Joe Stanley

R. Joe Stanley

Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, University of Missouri-Rolla Rolla, MO, USA

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William V. Stoecker

William V. Stoecker

Stoecker & Associates, Rolla, MO, USA

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Randy H. Moss

Randy H. Moss

Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, University of Missouri-Rolla, Rolla, MO, USA

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First published: 22 January 2007
Citations: 75
Address:
R. Joe Stanley
Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering
127 Emerson Electric Co. Hall
University of Missouri-Rolla
Rolla, MO 65409-0040
USA
Tel: +573 341 68 96
Fax: +573 341 45 32
e-mail:[email protected]

Abstract

Background: Skin lesion color is an important feature for diagnosing malignant melanoma. In previous research, skin lesion color was investigated for discriminating malignant melanoma lesions from benign lesions in clinical images. Colors characteristics of melanoma were determined using color histogram analysis over a training set of images. Percent melanoma color and color clustering ratio features were used to quantify the presence of melanoma-colored pixels within skin lesions for skin lesion discrimination.

Methods: In this research, the relative color histogram analysis technique is used to evaluate skin lesion discrimination based on color feature calculations in different regions of the skin lesion in dermoscopy images. The histogram analysis technique is examined for varying training set sizes from the set of 113 malignant melanomas and 113 benign dysplastic nevi images.

Results: Experimental results show improved discrimination capability for feature calculations focused in the interior lesion region. Recognition rates for malignant melanoma and dysplastic nevi as high as 87.7% and 74.9%, respectively, are observed for the color clustering ratio computed using the outer 75% uniformly distributed area with a 10% offset within the boundary.

Conclusions: Experimental results appear to indicate that the melanoma color feature information is located in the interior of the lesion, excluding the 10% central-most region. The techniques presented here including the use of relative color and the determination of benign and malignant regions of the relative color histogram may be applicable to any set of images of benign and malignant lesions.

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