Data-Driven Cervical Cancer Prediction Model with Outlier Detection and Over-Sampling Methodsopen access
- Authors
- Ijaz, Muhammad Fazal; Attique, Muhammad; Son, Youngdoo
- Issue Date
- May-2020
- Publisher
- MDPI
- Keywords
- cancer; artificial intelligence; digital health; machine learning; medical information systems; cervical cancer; imbalanced data analysis; outlier detection
- Citation
- SENSORS, v.20, no.10
- Indexed
- SCIE
SCOPUS
- Journal Title
- SENSORS
- Volume
- 20
- Number
- 10
- URI
- https://scholarworks.dongguk.edu/handle/sw.dongguk/6671
- DOI
- 10.3390/s20102809
- ISSN
- 1424-8220
1424-3210
- Abstract
- Globally, cervical cancer remains as the foremost prevailing cancer in females. Hence, it is necessary to distinguish the importance of risk factors of cervical cancer to classify potential patients. The present work proposes a cervical cancer prediction model (CCPM) that offers early prediction of cervical cancer using risk factors as inputs. The CCPM first removes outliers by using outlier detection methods such as density-based spatial clustering of applications with noise (DBSCAN) and isolation forest (iForest) and by increasing the number of cases in the dataset in a balanced way, for example, through synthetic minority over-sampling technique (SMOTE) and SMOTE with Tomek link (SMOTETomek). Finally, it employs random forest (RF) as a classifier. Thus, CCPM lies on four scenarios: (1) DBSCAN + SMOTETomek + RF, (2) DBSCAN + SMOTE+ RF, (3) iForest + SMOTETomek + RF, and (4) iForest + SMOTE + RF. A dataset of 858 potential patients was used to validate the performance of the proposed method. We found that combinations of iForest with SMOTE and iForest with SMOTETomek provided better performances than those of DBSCAN with SMOTE and DBSCAN with SMOTETomek. We also observed that RF performed the best among several popular machine learning classifiers. Furthermore, the proposed CCPM showed better accuracy than previously proposed methods for forecasting cervical cancer. In addition, a mobile application that can collect cervical cancer risk factors data and provides results from CCPM is developed for instant and proper action at the initial stage of cervical cancer.
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Collections - College of Engineering > Department of Industrial and Systems Engineering > 1. Journal Articles

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