Subjective and objective quality assessment of gastrointestinal endoscopy images: From manual operation to artificial intelligence

Front Neurosci. 2023 Feb 14:16:1118087. doi: 10.3389/fnins.2022.1118087. eCollection 2022.

Abstract

Gastrointestinal endoscopy has been identified as an important tool for cancer diagnosis and therapy, particularly for treating patients with early gastric cancer (EGC). It is well known that the quality of gastroscope images is a prerequisite for achieving a high detection rate of gastrointestinal lesions. Owing to manual operation of gastroscope detection, in practice, it possibly introduces motion blur and produces low-quality gastroscope images during the imaging process. Hence, the quality assessment of gastroscope images is the key process in the detection of gastrointestinal endoscopy. In this study, we first present a novel gastroscope image motion blur (GIMB) database that includes 1,050 images generated by imposing 15 distortion levels of motion blur on 70 lossless images and the associated subjective scores produced with the manual operation of 15 viewers. Then, we design a new artificial intelligence (AI)-based gastroscope image quality evaluator (GIQE) that leverages the newly proposed semi-full combination subspace to learn multiple kinds of human visual system (HVS) inspired features for providing objective quality scores. The results of experiments conducted on the GIMB database confirm that the proposed GIQE showed more effective performance compared with its state-of-the-art peers.

Keywords: gastroscope images; human visual system; motion blur; semi-full combination subspace; subjective and objective quality assessment.

Grants and funding

This work was supported in part by the Beijing Hospitals Authority Clinical Medicine Development of special funding support (XMLX202143), Capital's Funds for Health Improvement and Research (2020-2-2155), the Beijing Municipal Administration of Hospitals Incubating Program (PX2020047), the Science Foundation of Peking University Cancer Hospital (No. 202207), the Hygiene and Health Development Scientific Research Fostering Plan of Haidian District Beijing (HP2022-19-503002), and the Beijing Hospitals Authority Youth Programme (QML20211103).