Abstract:Retinal vessel segmentation is a crucial step in diagnosing and screening various diseases, including diabetes, ophthalmologic diseases, and cardiovascular diseases. In this paper, we propose an effective and efficient method for vessel segmentation in color fundus images using encoder-decoder based octave convolution network. Compared with other convolution networks utilizing vanilla convolution for feature extraction, the proposed method adopts octave convolution for learning multiple-spatial-frequency features, thus can better capture retinal vasculatures with varying sizes and shapes. It is demonstrated that the feature maps of low-frequency kernels respond mainly to the major vascular tree, whereas the high-frequency feature maps can better capture the fine details of thin vessels. To provide the network the capability of learning how to decode multifrequency features, we extend octave convolution and propose a new operation named octave transposed convolution. A novel architecture of convolutional neural network is proposed based on the encoder-decoder architecture of UNet, which can generate high resolution vessel segmentation in one single forward feeding. The proposed method is evaluated on four publicly available datasets, including DRIVE, STARE, CHASE_DB1, and HRF. Extensive experimental results demonstrate that the proposed approach achieves better or comparable performance to the state-of-the-art methods with fast processing speed.