Color Calibration on Human Skin Images

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Abstract

Many recent medical developments rely on image analysis, however, it is not convenient nor cost-efficient to use professional image acquisition tools in every clinic or laboratory. Hence, a reliable color calibration is necessary; color calibration refers to adjusting the pixel colors to a standard color space. During a real-life project on neonatal jaundice disease detection, we faced a problem to perform skin color calibration on already taken images of neonatal babies. These images were captured with a smartphone (Samsung Galaxy S7, equipped with a 12 Mega Pixel camera to capture 4032 3024 resolution images) in the presence of a specific calibration pattern. This post-processing image analysis deprived us from calibrating the camera itself. There is currently no comprehensive study on color calibration methods applied to human skin images, particularly when using amateur cameras (e.g. smartphones). We made a comprehensive study and we proposed a novel approach for color calibration, Gaussian process regression (GPR), a machine learning model that adapts to environmental variables. The results show that the GPR achieves equal results to state-of-the-art color calibration techniques, while also creating more general models.

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Amani, M., Falk, H., Jensen, O. D., Vartdal, G., Aune, A., & Lindseth, F. (2019). Color Calibration on Human Skin Images. In Lecture Notes in Computer Science (including subseries Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence and Lecture Notes in Bioinformatics) (Vol. 11754 LNCS, pp. 211–223). Springer. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-34995-0_20

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