Robust detection of retinal vessels remains an unsolved research problem, particularly in handling the intrinsic real-world challenges of highly imbalanced contrast between thick vessels and thin ones, inhomogeneous background regions,… Click to show full abstract
Robust detection of retinal vessels remains an unsolved research problem, particularly in handling the intrinsic real-world challenges of highly imbalanced contrast between thick vessels and thin ones, inhomogeneous background regions, uneven illumination, and complex geometries of crossing/bifurcations. This paper presents a new separable paravector orientation tensor that addresses these difficulties by characterizing the enhancement of retinal vessels to be dependent on a nonlinear scale representation, invariant to changes in contrast and lighting, responsive for symmetric patterns, and fitted with elliptical cross-sections. The proposed method is built on projecting vessels as a 3D paravector valued function rotated in an alpha quarter domain, providing geometrical, structural, symmetric, and energetic features. We introduce an innovative symmetrical inhibitory scheme that incorporates paravector features for producing a set of directional contrast-independent elongated-like patterns reconstructing vessel tree in orientation tensors. By fitting constraint elliptical volumes via eigensystem analysis, the final vessel tree is produced with a strong and uniform response preserving various vessel features. The validation of proposed method on clinically relevant retinal images with high-quality results, shows its excellent performance compared to the state-of-the-art benchmarks and the second human observers.
               
Click one of the above tabs to view related content.