Image texture extraction and analysis are fundamental steps in Computer Vision. In particular, considering the biomedical field, quantitative imaging methods are increasingly gaining importance since they convey scientifically and clinically relevant information for prediction, prognosis, and treatment response assessment. In this context, radiomic approaches are fostering large-scale studies that can have a significant impact in the clinical practice. In this work, we focus on Haralick features, the most common and clinically relevant descriptors. These features are based on the Gray-Level Co-occurrence Matrix (GLCM), whose computation is considerably intensive on images characterized by a high bitdepth (e.g., 16 bits), as in the case of medical images that convey detailed visual information. We propose here HaraliCU, an efficient strategy for the computation of the GLCM and the extraction of an exhaustive set of the Haralick features. HaraliCU was conceived to exploit the parallel computation capabilities of modern Graphics Processing Units (GPUs), allowing us to achieve up to ∼ 20× speed-up with respect to the corresponding C++ coded sequential version. Our GPU-powered solution highlights the promising capabilities of GPUs in the clinical research.

Rundo, L., Tangherloni, A., Galimberti, S., Cazzaniga, P., Woitek, R., Sala, E., et al. (2019). HaraliCU: GPU-Powered Haralick Feature Extraction on Medical Images Exploiting the Full Dynamics of Gray-Scale Levels. In Proc PaCT 2019 – Parallel Computing Technologies (pp.304-318). Springer Verlag [10.1007/978-3-030-25636-4_24].

HaraliCU: GPU-Powered Haralick Feature Extraction on Medical Images Exploiting the Full Dynamics of Gray-Scale Levels

Rundo, Leonardo;Tangherloni, Andrea;Nobile, Marco S.;Mauri, Giancarlo
Ultimo
2019

Abstract

Image texture extraction and analysis are fundamental steps in Computer Vision. In particular, considering the biomedical field, quantitative imaging methods are increasingly gaining importance since they convey scientifically and clinically relevant information for prediction, prognosis, and treatment response assessment. In this context, radiomic approaches are fostering large-scale studies that can have a significant impact in the clinical practice. In this work, we focus on Haralick features, the most common and clinically relevant descriptors. These features are based on the Gray-Level Co-occurrence Matrix (GLCM), whose computation is considerably intensive on images characterized by a high bitdepth (e.g., 16 bits), as in the case of medical images that convey detailed visual information. We propose here HaraliCU, an efficient strategy for the computation of the GLCM and the extraction of an exhaustive set of the Haralick features. HaraliCU was conceived to exploit the parallel computation capabilities of modern Graphics Processing Units (GPUs), allowing us to achieve up to ∼ 20× speed-up with respect to the corresponding C++ coded sequential version. Our GPU-powered solution highlights the promising capabilities of GPUs in the clinical research.
slide + paper
Haralick features; GPU computing; Full gray-scale range; Medical imaging;Radiomics;CUDA
English
Parallel Computing Technologies
2019
Malyshkin, V
Proc PaCT 2019 – Parallel Computing Technologies
9783030256357
2019
11657
304
318
none
Rundo, L., Tangherloni, A., Galimberti, S., Cazzaniga, P., Woitek, R., Sala, E., et al. (2019). HaraliCU: GPU-Powered Haralick Feature Extraction on Medical Images Exploiting the Full Dynamics of Gray-Scale Levels. In Proc PaCT 2019 – Parallel Computing Technologies (pp.304-318). Springer Verlag [10.1007/978-3-030-25636-4_24].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/240264
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