Comparing data mining with ensemble classification of breast cancer masses in digital mammograms

Shima Ghassem Pour, Peter McLeod, Brijesh Verma, Anthony Maeder

    Research output: Chapter in Book / Conference PaperConference Paperpeer-review

    5 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    Medical diagnosis sometimes involves detecting subtle indications of a disease or condition amongst a background of diverse healthy individuals. The amount of information that is available for discovering such indications for mammography is large and has been growing at an exponential rate, due to population wide screening programmes. In order to analyse this information data mining techniques have been utilised by various researchers. A question that arises is: do flexible data mining techniques have comparable accuracy to dedicated classification techniques for medical diagnostic processes? This research compares a model-based data mining technique with a neural network classification technique and the improvements possible using an ensemble approach. A publicly available breast cancer benchmark database is used to determine the utility of the techniques and compare the accuracies obtained.
    Original languageEnglish
    Title of host publicationThe Second Australian Workshop on Artificial Intelligence in Health: AIH 2012, held in conjunction with the 25th Australasian Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence (AI 2012), Tuesday, 4th December 2012, Sydney Harbour Marriott Hotel, Sydney, Australia: Workshop Proceedings
    PublisherTilburg University
    Pages55-63
    Number of pages9
    Publication statusPublished - 2012
    EventAustralian Workshop on Artificial Intelligence in Health -
    Duration: 4 Dec 2012 → …

    Publication series

    Name
    ISSN (Print)1613-0073

    Conference

    ConferenceAustralian Workshop on Artificial Intelligence in Health
    Period4/12/12 → …

    Keywords

    • breast
    • cancer
    • clustering
    • data mining
    • medical screening
    • radiography
    • tumors

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