Secured telemedicine of medical imaging based on dual robust watermarking
                 
        Academic Article in Scopus
                     
                
        
            
    
    
     
        
    
         
     
    
    -  
- Overview
-  
- Identity
-  
- Additional document info
-  
- View All
-  
Overview
        
            
                    abstract   
                
    - 
    	© 2021, The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature.Medical information management has progressed in the last few years because of the advances in information technologies. Nowadays, it is possible to share medical images among specialists geographically distant to interpret, discuss, and get improved diagnostics. However, any alteration of transmitted image metadata may lead to issues related to information security, such as detachment and authentication. Detachment refers to link the data of an electronic patient record to an incorrect medical image, while authentication aims to identify the image source. These security problems are critical as they may cause the loss of sensitive data or wrong medical diagnoses. Digital watermarking is an emerging technique that faces these security problems as it allows to embed the metadata directly into the medical image. This paper proposes a hybrid and robust watermarking technique to prevent detachment and authenticate medical images. The quantization index modulation algorithm under dither modulation in conjunction with forwarding error correction is used to embed relevant metadata as a robust-imperceptible watermarking to avoid detachment. The visible-imperceptible watermarking paradigm, whose use is an innovation in medical images, is applied to insert a second watermark in the spatial domain to perform authentication. The experimental results show the contribution of the proposed scheme and its efficiency regarding robustness and imperceptibility. 
    
status   
                
             
            
                    publication date   
                
             
            
                    published in   
                
             
         
         
        
        
            Identity
        
            
                    Digital Object Identifier (DOI)   
                
             
         
         
        
        
            Additional document info
        
            
                    has global citation frequency   
                
             
            
                    start page   
                
             
            
                    end page   
                
             
            
                    volume