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1.
Artif Intell Med ; 138: 102476, 2023 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36990583

ABSTRACT

Medical image segmentation is a fundamental and critical step in many clinical approaches. Semi-supervised learning has been widely applied to medical image segmentation tasks since it alleviates the heavy burden of acquiring expert-examined annotations and takes the advantage of unlabeled data which is much easier to acquire. Although consistency learning has been proven to be an effective approach by enforcing an invariance of predictions under different distributions, existing approaches cannot make full use of region-level shape constraint and boundary-level distance information from unlabeled data. In this paper, we propose a novel uncertainty-guided mutual consistency learning framework to effectively exploit unlabeled data by integrating intra-task consistency learning from up-to-date predictions for self-ensembling and cross-task consistency learning from task-level regularization to exploit geometric shape information. The framework is guided by the estimated segmentation uncertainty of models to select out relatively certain predictions for consistency learning, so as to effectively exploit more reliable information from unlabeled data. Experiments on two publicly available benchmark datasets showed that: (1) Our proposed method can achieve significant performance improvement by leveraging unlabeled data, with up to 4.13% and 9.82% in Dice coefficient compared to supervised baseline on left atrium segmentation and brain tumor segmentation, respectively. (2) Compared with other semi-supervised segmentation methods, our proposed method achieve better segmentation performance under the same backbone network and task settings on both datasets, demonstrating the effectiveness and robustness of our method and potential transferability for other medical image segmentation tasks.


Subject(s)
Brain Neoplasms , Humans , Uncertainty , Supervised Machine Learning , Image Processing, Computer-Assisted
2.
Comput Med Imaging Graph ; 99: 102088, 2022 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35780703

ABSTRACT

Recently, deep convolutional neural networks have achieved great success for medical image segmentation. However, unlike segmentation of natural images, most medical images such as MRI and CT are volumetric data. In order to make full use of volumetric information, 3D CNNs are widely used. However, 3D CNNs suffer from higher inference time and computation cost, which hinders their further clinical applications. Additionally, with the increased number of parameters, the risk of overfitting is higher, especially for medical images where data and annotations are expensive to acquire. To issue this problem, many 2.5D segmentation methods have been proposed to make use of volumetric spatial information with less computation cost. Despite these works lead to improvements on a variety of segmentation tasks, to the best of our knowledge, there has not previously been a large-scale empirical comparison of these methods. In this paper, we aim to present a review of the latest developments of 2.5D methods for volumetric medical image segmentation. Additionally, to compare the performance and effectiveness of these methods, we provide an empirical study of these methods on three representative segmentation tasks involving different modalities and targets. Our experimental results highlight that 3D CNNs may not always be the best choice. Despite all these 2.5D methods can bring performance gains to 2D baseline, not all the methods hold the benefits on different datasets. We hope the results and conclusions of our study will prove useful for the community on exploring and developing efficient volumetric medical image segmentation methods.


Subject(s)
Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Neural Networks, Computer , Image Processing, Computer-Assisted/methods , Imaging, Three-Dimensional/methods
3.
IEEE J Biomed Health Inform ; 25(11): 4152-4162, 2021 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34415840

ABSTRACT

The novel Coronavirus disease (COVID-19) is a highly contagious virus and has spread all over the world, posing an extremely serious threat to all countries. Automatic lung infection segmentation from computed tomography (CT) plays an important role in the quantitative analysis of COVID-19. However, the major challenge lies in the inadequacy of annotated COVID-19 datasets. Currently, there are several public non-COVID lung lesion segmentation datasets, providing the potential for generalizing useful information to the related COVID-19 segmentation task. In this paper, we propose a novel relation-driven collaborative learning model to exploit shared knowledge from non-COVID lesions for annotation-efficient COVID-19 CT lung infection segmentation. The model consists of a general encoder to capture general lung lesion features based on multiple non-COVID lesions, and a target encoder to focus on task-specific features based on COVID-19 infections. We develop a collaborative learning scheme to regularize feature-level relation consistency of given input and encourage the model to learn more general and discriminative representation of COVID-19 infections. Extensive experiments demonstrate that trained with limited COVID-19 data, exploiting shared knowledge from non-COVID lesions can further improve state-of-the-art performance with up to 3.0% in dice similarity coefficient and 4.2% in normalized surface dice. In addition, experimental results on large scale 2D dataset with CT slices show that our method significantly outperforms cutting-edge segmentation methods metrics. Our method promotes new insights into annotation-efficient deep learning and illustrates strong potential for real-world applications in the global fight against COVID-19 in the absence of sufficient high-quality annotations.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 , Lung , Benchmarking , Humans , Lung/diagnostic imaging , SARS-CoV-2 , Tomography, X-Ray Computed
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