Ergene, M.C.Bayrak, A.Çevik, M.Ceylan, M.2023-11-112023-11-11202397830314565720302-9743https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-44511-8_9https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.13091/47592nd Workshop on Artificial Intelligence over Infrared Images for Medical Applications, AIIIMA 2023 -- 2 October 2023 through 2 October 2023 -- -- 302149Competition and market size in sports are constantly increasing. In this case, one of the biggest problems of sports clubs is athlete injuries. Especially in football, athlete injury costs are very high. However, most injuries are non-contact and preventable. Sports medicine specialists utilise many medical imaging methods for the prevention of sports injuries. Thermography is an imaging method that has been used in the examination of sports injuries in recent years. Fast and accurate segmentation of muscle regions in thermal images enables more objective analyses. In this study, lower extremity thermal images were taken from football players of a super league club for a certain period of time. From these raw thermal images, 9 different muscle groups of the athletes were labelled and a dataset was created. U-Net, FPN, Linknet and PSPNet segmentation models were trained with this dataset. IoU, F1, Precision, Recall, Precision, Recall evaluation metrics were used to evaluate these models. In the separate models trained for each muscle group, the IoU value achieved over 95% success. When the results of the study are analysed, it is discussed that these segmentation models can be used as a critical tool in injury analysis and evaluation in athletes. © 2023, The Author(s), under exclusive license to Springer Nature Switzerland AG.eninfo:eu-repo/semantics/closedAccessInjury PreventionSports InjuryThermal SegmentationDeep learningImage segmentationMedical imagingSportsSports medicineThermography (imaging)Imaging methodInjury preventionLearning modelsLower extremityMuscle segmentationSegmentation modelsSports injuriesThermalThermal imagesThermal segmentationMuscleEvaluation of Deep Learning Models for Lower Extremity Muscle Segmentation in Thermal ImagingConference Object10.1007/978-3-031-44511-8_92-s2.0-85174491889