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Auxiliary signal-guided knowledge encoder-decoder for medical report generation.
Li, Mingjie; Liu, Rui; Wang, Fuyu; Chang, Xiaojun; Liang, Xiaodan.
  • Li M; University of Technology Sydney, Sydney, Australia.
  • Liu R; Monash University, Melbourne, Australia.
  • Wang F; Sun Yat-sen University, Guangzhou, China.
  • Chang X; University of Technology Sydney, Sydney, Australia.
  • Liang X; Sun Yat-sen University, Shenzhen, China.
World Wide Web ; : 1-18, 2022 Aug 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-2242664
ABSTRACT
Medical reports have significant clinical value to radiologists and specialists, especially during a pandemic like COVID. However, beyond the common difficulties faced in the natural image captioning, medical report generation specifically requires the model to describe a medical image with a fine-grained and semantic-coherence paragraph that should satisfy both medical commonsense and logic. Previous works generally extract the global image features and attempt to generate a paragraph that is similar to referenced reports; however, this approach has two limitations. Firstly, the regions of primary interest to radiologists are usually located in a small area of the global image, meaning that the remainder parts of the image could be considered as irrelevant noise in the training procedure. Secondly, there are many similar sentences used in each medical report to describe the normal regions of the image, which causes serious data bias. This deviation is likely to teach models to generate these inessential sentences on a regular basis. To address these problems, we propose an Auxiliary Signal-Guided Knowledge Encoder-Decoder (ASGK) to mimic radiologists' working patterns. Specifically, the auxiliary patches are explored to expand the widely used visual patch features before fed to the Transformer encoder, while the external linguistic signals help the decoder better master prior knowledge during the pre-training process. Our approach performs well on common benchmarks, including CX-CHR, IU X-Ray, and COVID-19 CT Report dataset (COV-CTR), demonstrating combining auxiliary signals with transformer architecture can bring a significant improvement in terms of medical report generation. The experimental results confirm that auxiliary signals driven Transformer-based models are with solid capabilities to outperform previous approaches on both medical terminology classification and paragraph generation metrics.
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Full text: Available Collection: International databases Database: MEDLINE Type of study: Prognostic study Language: English Journal: World Wide Web Year: 2022 Document Type: Article Affiliation country: S11280-022-01013-6

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Full text: Available Collection: International databases Database: MEDLINE Type of study: Prognostic study Language: English Journal: World Wide Web Year: 2022 Document Type: Article Affiliation country: S11280-022-01013-6