Kist A, Zilker J, Gómez P, Schützenberger A, Döllinger M (2020)
Publication Type: Journal article
Publication year: 2020
Book Volume: 10
Article Number: 20723
Journal Issue: 1
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-020-77216-6
A healthy voice is crucial for verbal communication and hence in daily as well as professional life. The basis for a healthy voice are the sound producing vocal folds in the larynx. A hallmark of healthy vocal fold oscillation is the symmetric motion of the left and right vocal fold. Clinically, videoendoscopy is applied to assess the symmetry of the oscillation and evaluated subjectively. High-speed videoendoscopy, an emerging method that allows quantification of the vocal fold oscillation, is more commonly employed in research due to the amount of data and the complex, semi-automatic analysis. In this study, we provide a comprehensive evaluation of methods that detect fully automatically the glottal midline. We used a biophysical model to simulate different vocal fold oscillations, extended the openly available BAGLS dataset using manual annotations, utilized both, simulations and annotated endoscopic images, to train deep neural networks at different stages of the analysis workflow, and compared these to established computer vision algorithms. We found that classical computer vision perform well on detecting the glottal midline in glottis segmentation data, but are outperformed by deep neural networks on this task. We further suggest GlottisNet, a multi-task neural architecture featuring the simultaneous prediction of both, the opening between the vocal folds and the symmetry axis, leading to a huge step forward towards clinical applicability of quantitative, deep learning-assisted laryngeal endoscopy, by fully automating segmentation and midline detection.
APA:
Kist, A., Zilker, J., Gómez, P., Schützenberger, A., & Döllinger, M. (2020). Rethinking glottal midline detection. Scientific Reports, 10(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-020-77216-6
MLA:
Kist, Andreas, et al. "Rethinking glottal midline detection." Scientific Reports 10.1 (2020).
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