Work place: Pillai College of Engineering, New Panvel, India
E-mail: yijmelvin@mes.ac.in
Website: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1515-8487
Research Interests:
Biography
Jinesh Melvin Y. I. has been awarded a Ph.D degree in Computer Engineering from Pacific Academic of Higher Education and Research University. I received a BE and ME degree in Computer Engineering from Anna University Chennai, Tamil Nadu, India in June 2012 and May 2014 respectively. I have published various book chapters, Scopus, SCI, WOS, UGC care list Journalpapers and present the papers in referred national as well as international conferences including IEEE, ACM, Elsevier, Springer, CRC Press-Taylor & Francis, Atlantis press,with copyrights. I have been awarded 2nd Place in National level XZ1BIT2.0 digital national level poster making competition, also recognize various awards, appreciation and excellence in different events conducted by various organizations. My research activities involve Machine Learning, Data Mining, Advanced DBMS and Internet of Things.
By Sahil Chukka Vardhanika Jagtap Naveen Patel Sudiksha Jadhav Mimi Cherian Jinesh Melvin Y. I.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.5815/ijigsp.2025.04.07, Pub. Date: 8 Aug. 2025
In ophthalmology, Choroidal Neovascularization (CNV) is a serious medical disease that, if left untreated, frequently results in significant vision loss. In this investigation, we investigate the evaluation and working of deep learning models, notably basic Convolutional Neural Networks (CNN), ResNet18, ResNet50, VGG16, VGG19, Vision Transformers, EfficientNetV2L, MobileNetV2 and InceptionV3 for identification and classification of CNV in Optical Coherence Tomography (OCT) images. The Kermany dataset, which includes OCT images of both CNV-patients and non-CNV patients (Normal OCT images) are utilized for this paper. The dataset was further used in three different versions based on validation and training split. The images from the dataset are already pre-processed and labelled so no pre-processing operations were performed, how- ever resizing of images have been performed according to the models. The deep learning models are trained and evaluated on standard performance metrics such as precision, recall, accuracy, F1-score, etc. All things considered, our work shows the evaluation of deep learning models to classify OCT images that show the presence of CNV. Based on all three dataset versions, the findings of our study confirm that ResNet18, VGGNet19, and MobileNetV2 beat all other approaches and achieved an average accuracy of 1. Additionally, Vision Transformer and Effi- cientNetV2L demonstrated strong performance, averaging 0.99 and 0.96 accuracy on each of the three dataset versions, respectively. These models have the potential to help ophthalmologists detect CNV early and monitor it, which may lead to prompt treatment and better vision preservation for patients.
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