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ADVANCING DERMATOLOGIC ONCOLOGY USING PARAMETER-REFINED DEEP LEARNING-DRIVEN STRATEGY FOR ENHANCED PRECISION MEDICINE.

Authors :
ALABDAN, RANA
MENGASH, HANAN ABDULLAH
ASIRI, MASHAEL M.
ALRSLANI, FAHEED A. F.
MOHAMED, ABDULLAH
ALZAHRANI, YAZEED
Source :
Fractals. Jan2025, p1. 16p.
Publication Year :
2025

Abstract

Dermatologic oncology’s precision medicine revolutionizes skin cancer detection by integrating advanced technologies and personalized patient data. Dermatologic oncology concentrates on detecting skin cancer, utilizing modern techniques and technologies to detect and classify several kinds of cutaneous malignancies. Leveraging medical knowledge or advanced imaging approaches like dermoscopy and reflectance confocal microscopy; dermatologists effectively investigate skin cancer for subtle signs of malignancy. Furthermore, computer-aided diagnostic (CAD) systems, controlled by machine learning (ML) methods, are gradually deployed to boost diagnostic accuracy by investigating massive datasets of dermatoscopic images. It is a multi-disciplinary method that allows early recognition of skin lesions and enables precise prognostication and particular treatment approach, finally enhancing patient outcomes in dermatologic oncology. This paper presents the Fractals Snake Optimization with Deep Learning for Accurate Classification of Skin Cancer in Dermoscopy Images (SODL-ACSCDI) approach. The purpose of the SODL-ACSCDI approach is to identify and categorize the existence of skin cancer on Dermoscopic images. The SODL-ACSCDI technique applies a contrast enhancement process as the initial step. Next, the SODL-ACSCDI technique involves the SE-ResNet+FPN model for deriving intrinsic and complex feature patterns from dermoscopic images. Additionally, the SO technique can help boost the hyperparameter selection of the SE-ResNet+FPN approach. Furthermore, skin cancer classification uses the convolutional autoencoder (CAE) approach. The experimentation results of the SODL-ACSCDI technique could be examined using a dermoscopic image dataset. A wide-ranging result of the SODL-ACSCDI technique indicated a superior performance of 99.61% compared to recent models concerning various metrics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0218348X
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Fractals
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
182176208
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1142/s0218348x25400092