ExpHBA Deep-IoT: Exponential Honey Badger Optimized Deep Learning For Breast Cancer Detection in IoT Healthcare System.

Journal: Journal of digital imaging
Published Date:

Abstract

Breast cancer (BC) is the most widely found disease among women in the world. The early detection of BC can frequently lessen the mortality rate as well as progress the probability of providing proper treatment. Hence, this paper focuses on devising the Exponential Honey Badger Optimization-based Deep Covolutional Neural Network (EHBO-based DCNN) for early identification of BC in the Internet of Things (IoT). Here, the Honey Badger Optimization (HBO) and Exponential Weighted Moving Average (EWMA) algorithms have been combined to create the EHBO. The EHBO is created to transfer the acquired medical data to the base station (BS) by choosing the best cluster heads to categorize the BC. Then, the statistical and texture features are extracted. Further, data augmentation is performed. Finally, the BC classification is done by DCNN. Thus, the observational outcome reveals that the EHBO-based DCNN algorithm attained outstanding performance concerning the testing accuracy, sensitivity, and specificity of 0.9051, 0.8971, and 0.9029, correspondingly. The accuracy of the proposed method is 7.23%, 6.62%, 5.39%, and 3.45% higher than the methods, such as multi-layer perceptron (MLP) classifier, deep learning, support vector machine (SVM), and ensemble-based classifier.

Authors

  • R Rajeswari
    Department of Electronics and Communication Engineering, Rajalakshmi Institute of Technology, Chennai, India. rajimaniphd@gmail.com.
  • G V Sriramakrishnan
    Department of CSE, Mohan Babu University, SreeSainath Nagar, Tirupati, Andhra Pradesh, 517102, India.
  • Ch Vidyadhari
    Department of Information Technology, Gokaraju Rangaraju Institute of Engineering and Technology, Hyderabad, Bachupally, India.
  • K V Kanimozhi
    Department of Computer Science and Engineering, Saveetha School of Engineering, Saveetha Institute of Medical and Technical Sciences, Chennai, India.