COVID-19 Detection on Chest X-Ray Images: A comparison of CNN architectures and ensembles

11/18/2021
by   Fabricio Breve, et al.
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COVID-19 quickly became a global pandemic after only four months of its first detection. It is crucial to detect this disease as soon as possible to decrease its spread. The use of chest X-ray (CXR) images became an effective screening strategy, complementary to the reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR). Convolutional neural networks (CNNs) are often used for automatic image classification and they can be very useful in CXR diagnostics. In this paper, 21 different CNN architectures are tested and compared in the task of identifying COVID-19 in CXR images. They were applied to the COVIDx8B dataset, which is the largest and more diverse COVID-19 dataset available. Ensembles of CNNs were also employed and they showed better efficacy than individual instances. The best individual CNN instance results were achieved by DenseNet169, with an accuracy of 98.15 further increased to 99.25 five instances of DenseNet169. These results are higher than those obtained in recent works using the same dataset.

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