Abstract

Training of neural networks for automated diagnosis of pigmented skin lesions is hampered by the small size and lack of diversity of available datasets of dermatoscopic images. We tackle this problem by releasing the HAM10000 ("Human Against Machine with 10000 training images") dataset. We collected dermatoscopic images from different populations acquired and stored by different modalities. Given this diversity we had to apply different acquisition and cleaning methods and developed semi-automatic workflows utilizing specifically trained neural networks. The final dataset consists of 10015 dermatoscopic images which are released as a training set for academic machine learning purposes and are publicly available through the ISIC archive. This benchmark dataset can be used for machine learning and for comparisons with human experts. Cases include a representative collection of all important diagnostic categories in the realm of pigmented lesions. More than 50% of lesions have been confirmed by pathology, while the ground truth for the rest of the cases was either follow-up, expert consensus, or confirmation by in-vivo confocal microscopy.

MeSH Terms

DermoscopyHumansImage ProcessingComputer-AssistedPigmentation DisordersSkin Diseases

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Publication Info

Year
2018
Type
article
Volume
5
Issue
1
Pages
180161-180161
Citations
2642
Access
Closed

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Cite This

Philipp Tschandl, Cliff Rosendahl, Harald Kittler et al. (2018). The HAM10000 dataset, a large collection of multi-source dermatoscopic images of common pigmented skin lesions. Scientific Data , 5 (1) , 180161-180161. https://doi.org/10.1038/sdata.2018.161

Identifiers

DOI
10.1038/sdata.2018.161
PMID
30106392
PMCID
PMC6091241

Data Quality

Data completeness: 81%