A spatio-temporal analysis approach for detecting biopsy and therapeutic operations in colonoscopy videos

Thumbnail Image
Date
2004-01-01
Authors
Li, Dalei
Major Professor
Advisor
Committee Member
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Altmetrics
Authors
Research Projects
Organizational Units
Organizational Unit
Computer Science

Computer Science—the theory, representation, processing, communication and use of information—is fundamentally transforming every aspect of human endeavor. The Department of Computer Science at Iowa State University advances computational and information sciences through; 1. educational and research programs within and beyond the university; 2. active engagement to help define national and international research, and 3. educational agendas, and sustained commitment to graduating leaders for academia, industry and government.

History
The Computer Science Department was officially established in 1969, with Robert Stewart serving as the founding Department Chair. Faculty were composed of joint appointments with Mathematics, Statistics, and Electrical Engineering. In 1969, the building which now houses the Computer Science department, then simply called the Computer Science building, was completed. Later it was named Atanasoff Hall. Throughout the 1980s to present, the department expanded and developed its teaching and research agendas to cover many areas of computing.

Dates of Existence
1969-present

Related Units

Journal Issue
Is Version Of
Versions
Series
Department
Computer Science
Abstract

Colonoscopy is an important screening tool for colorectal cancer - the second leading cause of all cancer deaths behind lung cancer in the United States. During a colonoscopic procedure, a tiny video camera at the tip of the endoscope generates a video signal of the internal mucosa of the colon. In this thesis, we design, implement, and evaluate a spatio-temporal analysis technique that can automatically identify operation shots; each is a video segment that corresponds to a biopsy or therapeutic operation in a colonoscopy video. Operation shots are of great interest to endoscopists as they can be used as teaching materials, for identifying causes of complications as a result of the operations, and for evaluating endoscopists' procedural skills. Important statistics such as the number of biopsy and therapeutic procedures performed per day can be easily obtained. To the best of our knowledge, there are no analysis techniques designed for operation shot detection in literature. Experimental results on colonoscopy videos captured from real colonoscopic procedures demonstrate that the proposed technique can correctly discover all meaningful operation shots with very few false alarms.

Comments
Description
Keywords
Citation
Source
Copyright
Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 UTC 2004