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Hafiyan Fazagi Adnanto
Universitas Pembangunan Nasional "Veteran" Jawa Timur

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Autoimmune Skin Disease Image Classification using EfficientViT-M1 with AdamW Optimizer Hafiyan Fazagi Adnanto; Anggraini Puspita Sari; Achmad Junaidi
bit-Tech Vol. 8 No. 2 (2025): bit-Tech
Publisher : Komunitas Dosen Indonesia

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.32877/bt.v8i2.3300

Abstract

Diagnosing autoimmune skin diseases is a clinical challenge because several conditions share overlapping visual characteristics. This study evaluates the EfficientViT-M1 model trained with the AdamW optimizer to classify images from five autoimmune skin disease categories. The dataset contains 3,336 images before augmentation and is divided into 60 percent training, 20 percent validation, and 20 percent testing to ensure stable evaluation and reduce overfitting. The model is trained for 50 epochs with a learning rate of 0.0001, and experiments using batch sizes of 64, 128, and 256 are conducted to analyze the impact of data processing on performance. Performance is measured using accuracy, precision, recall, and F1-score derived from confusion matrix results. The best performance appears at a batch size of 64, achieving 89.25 percent accuracy along with balanced precision, recall, and F1-score. These results show that EfficientViT-M1 can extract relevant lesion features while maintaining computational efficiency. A notable challenge emerges when distinguishing visually similar disease classes, particularly Psoriasis and Lichen, which often share comparable textures and color patterns that contribute to misclassification. This highlights the influence of dataset imbalance and visual overlap on prediction outcomes. The approach offers potential value for clinical practice, especially in underserved areas where automated decision support can help early screening when specialist access is limited. The model demonstrates encouraging potential as a resource-efficient tool for dermatological assessment. Future improvements may include increasing dataset diversity, incorporating clinical metadata, and exploring alternative optimization strategies to enhance diagnostic reliability.