Evaluating the Efficacy of Various Deep Learning Architectures for Automated Preprocessing and Identification of Impacted Maxillary Canines in Panoramic Radiographs.

Authors

Alenezi O,Bhattacharjee T,Alseed HA,Tosun YI,Chaudhry J,Prasad S

Affiliations (4)

  • Department of Orthodontics, Hamdan Bin Mohammed College of Dental Medicine, Mohammed Bin Rashid University of Medicine and Health Sciences, Dubai, UAE.
  • Oudari Consultancy, Konnagar, West Bengal, India.
  • Department of Oral Diagnostics and Surgical Sciences, Hamdan Bin Mohammed College of Dental Medicine, Mohammed Bin Rashid University of Medicine and Health Sciences, Dubai, UAE.
  • Department of Orthodontics, Hamdan Bin Mohammed College of Dental Medicine, Mohammed Bin Rashid University of Medicine and Health Sciences, Dubai, UAE. Electronic address: [email protected].

Abstract

Previously, automated cropping and a reasonable classification accuracy for distinguishing impacted and non-impacted canines were demonstrated. This study evaluates multiple convolutional neural network (CNN) architectures for improving accuracy as a step towards a fully automated software for identification of impacted maxillary canines (IMCs) in panoramic radiographs (PRs). Eight CNNs (SqueezeNet, GoogLeNet, NASNet-Mobile, ShuffleNet, VGG-16, ResNet 50, DenseNet 201, and Inception V3) were compared in terms of their ability to classify 2 groups of PRs (impacted: n = 91; and non-impacted: n = 91 maxillary canines) before pre-processing and after applying automated cropping. For the PRs with impacted and non-impacted maxillary canines, GoogLeNet achieved the highest classification performance among the tested CNN architectures. Area under the curve (AUC) values of the Receiver Operating Characteristic (ROC) analysis without preprocessing and with preprocessing were 0.9 and 0.99 respectively, compared to 0.84 and 0.96 respectively with SqueezeNet. Among the tested CNN architectures, GoogLeNet achieved the highest performance on this dataset for the automated identification of impacted maxillary canines on both cropped and uncropped PRs.

Topics

Journal Article

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