Medical Image Analysis
Deep learning for classifying tumor patches in cancer histopathlogy images and segmenting blood vessels in brain CT slides.
As a research personnel at the UCI Center for Artificial Intelligence in Diagnostic Medicine, I developed classification and segmentation tools for medical imaging to facilitate disease diagnosis.
While many research has gone into cancer detection since the growth of deep learning, most have focused on analysis with CT scans. Whole slide images (WSI) stained with hematoxylin and eosin (H&E) in digital pathology has been the gold standard for identifying different type of cells and tissues. 2 scenarios: Pathologists
Lung adenocarcinoma is the most frequently diagnosed lung cancer in the United States and osteosarcoma is one of the most common forms of cancers for children, adolescents, and young adults.
To give your project a background in the portfolio page, just add the img tag to the front matter like so:
---
layout: page
title: project
description: a project with a background image
img: /assets/img/12.jpg
---




You can also put regular text between your rows of images, even citations (missing reference). Say you wanted to write a bit about your project before you posted the rest of the images. You describe how you toiled, sweated, bled for your project, and then… you reveal its glory in the next row of images.


The code is simple. Just wrap your images with <div class="col-sm">
and place them inside <div class="row">
(read more about the Bootstrap Grid system). To make images responsive, add img-fluid
class to each; for rounded corners and shadows use rounded
and z-depth-1
classes. Here’s the code for the last row of images above:
<div class="row justify-content-sm-center">
<div class="col-sm-8 mt-3 mt-md-0">
{% include figure.liquid path="assets/img/6.jpg" title="example image" class="img-fluid rounded z-depth-1" %}
</div>
<div class="col-sm-4 mt-3 mt-md-0">
{% include figure.liquid path="assets/img/11.jpg" title="example image" class="img-fluid rounded z-depth-1" %}
</div>
</div>