Work place: Department of Computer Science and Engineering, Siddhartha Academy of Higher Education, Deemed to be University, Vijayawada-520007, Andhra Pradesh, India
E-mail: ashutosh@vrsiddhartha.ac.in
Website: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2531-4079
Research Interests:
Biography
Ashutosh Satapathy is working in the Department of Computer Science and Engineering as an assistant professor (Selection Grade) at Siddhartha Academy of Higher Education, Deemed to be University, Vijayawada-520007, Andhra Pradesh, India. He completed his Ph.D. at Vellore Institute of Technology, India, and his Master of Technology (M. Tech) in Information Security and Computer Forensics at SRM University, India. During his Ph.D. program, he completed a research internship at Information and Communications Research Laboratories, ITRI-Taiwan. Before this, he was a lecturer at Odisha University of Technology and Research (formerly College of Engineering and Technology, Bhubaneswar). He has published 24 research articles, including international journal articles, book chapters, and conference proceedings, all indexed in SCIE (WoS) or Scopus.
By Ashutosh Satapathy Praneeth Vallabhaneni Manisha Indugula
DOI: https://doi.org/10.5815/ijigsp.2025.06.02, Pub. Date: 8 Dec. 2025
According to the World Health Organization (WHO) touchstones of 2022, Tuberculosis is the second dominant disease after COVID-19. Around one-fourth of the comprehensive population is ascertained to have tuberculosis. Timely detection and prevention of tuberculosis is a must to overcome its harmful effects. The method most often used in ascertaining whether a patient has tuberculosis, is examining his or her sputum sample. In the process, the isolation of the bacilli is done manually, and hence it is prone to error. Segmentation illustrates and enlightens objects or particles within an image, thus extracting the Region of Interest (ROI). The contemplated study uses TransUNet architecture to segment tuberculosis bacilli from sputum images to increase diagnostic accuracy and performance. The attention mechanism used in the TransUNet model helps to identify the spatial hierarchies present in image. It is an extremely tough task for naive or traditional segmentation algorithms to deal with the inherent complexity of sputum images. Hence, this study introduces an approach to capture the intrinsic features and dependencies needed to segment mycobacterium or TB bacilli by leveraging the TransUNet model. The model achieved an average Dice Score of 92.795%, a mean Intersection over Union (IoU) of 88.845%, and a segmentation accuracy of 99.19% on the Mosaic and Ziehl-Neelsen datasets. These results surpassed several existing state-of-art methods like UNet, clustering and thresholding, depicting the superior capability of TransUNet in segmenting the TB bacilli. It deepens the potentiality of transformer-based CNN models, especially TransUNet, for improving the diagnosis of tuberculosis and supporting disease management.
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