Policy Learning for Actively Labeled Sample Selection on Lumbar Semi-supervised Classification.

Journal: Journal of imaging informatics in medicine
PMID:

Abstract

Large labeled data bring significant performance improvement, but acquiring labeled medical data is particularly challenging due to the laborious, time-consuming, and medically qualified annotation. Semi-supervised learning has been employed to leverage unlabeled data. However, the quality and quantity of annotated data have a great influence on the performance of the semi-supervised model. Selecting informative samples through active learning is crucial and could improve model performance. Therefore, we propose a unified semi-supervised active learning architecture (RL-based SSAL) that alternately trains a semi-supervised network and performs active sample selection. Semi-supervised model is first well trained for sample selection, and selected label-required samples are annotated and added to the previously labeled dataset for subsequent semi-supervised model training. To learn to select the most informative samples, we adopt a policy learning-based approach that treats sample selection as a decision-making process. A novel reward function based on the product of predictive confidence and uncertainty is designed, aiming to select samples with high confidence and uncertainty. Comparisons with a semi-supervised baseline on collected lumbar disc herniation dataset demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed RL-based SSAL, achieving over 3% promotion across different amounts of labeled data. Comparisons with other active learning methods and ablation studies reveal the superiority of proposed policy learning based on active sample selection and reward function. Our model trained with only 200 labeled data achieves an accuracy of 89.32% which is comparable to the performance achieved with the entire labeled dataset, demonstrating its significant advantage.

Authors

  • Jinjin Hai
    National Digital Switching System Engineering & Technological R&D Center, China.
  • Jian Chen
    School of Pharmacy, Shanghai Jiaotong University, Shanghai, China.
  • Kai Qiao
    National Digital Switching System Engineering and Technological Research Centre, Zhengzhou, China.
  • Zhihai Su
    Department of Spinal Surgery, The Fifth Affiliated Hospital of Sun Yat-sen University, Zhuhai, China.
  • Hai Lu
    School of Information Science and Engineering, Xiamen University, Xiamen 361005, China. luhai@xmu.edu.cn.
  • Bin Yan
    National Digital Switching System Engineering and Technological Research Centre, Zhengzhou, China.