Automated segmentation of microtomography imaging of Egyptian mummies

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Abstract

Propagation Phase Contrast Synchrotron Microtomography (PPC-SRμCT) is the gold standard for non-invasive and non-destructive access to internal structures of archaeological remains. In this analysis, the virtual specimen needs to be segmented to separate different parts or materials, a process that normally requires considerable human effort. In the Automated SEgmentation of Microtomography Imaging (ASEMI) project, we developed a tool to automatically segment these volumetric images, using manually segmented samples to tune and train a machine learning model. For a set of four specimens of ancient Egyptian animal mummies we achieve an overall accuracy of 94–98% when compared with manually segmented slices, approaching the results of off-the-shelf commercial software using deep learning (97–99%) at much lower complexity. A qualitative analysis of the segmented output shows that our results are close in terms of usability to those from deep learning, justifying the use of these techniques.

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Tanti, M., Berruyer, C., Tafforeau, P., Muscat, A., Farrugia, R., Scerri, K., … Briffa, J. A. (2021). Automated segmentation of microtomography imaging of Egyptian mummies. PLoS ONE, 16(12 December). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0260707

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