Multi-stage malaria parasite recognition by deep learning

Gigascience. 2021 Jun 17;10(6):giab040. doi: 10.1093/gigascience/giab040.

Abstract

Motivation: Malaria, a mosquito-borne infectious disease affecting humans and other animals, is widespread in tropical and subtropical regions. Microscopy is the most common method for diagnosing the malaria parasite from stained blood smear samples. However, this technique is time consuming and must be performed by a well-trained professional, yet it remains prone to errors. Distinguishing the multiple growth stages of parasites remains an especially challenging task.

Results: In this article, we develop a novel deep learning approach for the recognition of malaria parasites of various stages in blood smear images using a deep transfer graph convolutional network (DTGCN). To our knowledge, this is the first application of graph convolutional network (GCN) on multi-stage malaria parasite recognition in such images. The proposed DTGCN model is based on unsupervised learning by transferring knowledge learnt from source images that contain the discriminative morphology characteristics of multi-stage malaria parasites. This transferred information guarantees the effectiveness of the target parasite recognition. This approach first learns the identical representations from the source to establish topological correlations between source class groups and the unlabelled target samples. At this stage, the GCN is implemented to extract graph feature representations for multi-stage malaria parasite recognition. The proposed method showed higher accuracy and effectiveness in publicly available microscopic images of multi-stage malaria parasites compared to a wide range of state-of-the-art approaches. Furthermore, this method is also evaluated on a large-scale dataset of unseen malaria parasites and the Babesia dataset.

Availability: Code and dataset are available at https://github.com/senli2018/DTGCN_2021 under a MIT license.

Keywords: deep learning; graph convolutional network; knowledge transfer; malaria; microscopic image analysis; multi-stage recognition.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Deep Learning*
  • Humans
  • Malaria* / diagnosis
  • Parasites*