Segmenting functional tissue units across human organs using community-driven development of generalizable machine learning algorithms.

Journal: Nature communications
Published Date:

Abstract

The development of a reference atlas of the healthy human body requires automated image segmentation of major anatomical structures across multiple organs based on spatial bioimages generated from various sources with differences in sample preparation. We present the setup and results of the Hacking the Human Body machine learning algorithm development competition hosted by the Human Biomolecular Atlas (HuBMAP) and the Human Protein Atlas (HPA) teams on the Kaggle platform. We create a dataset containing 880 histology images with 12,901 segmented structures, engaging 1175 teams from 78 countries in community-driven, open-science development of machine learning models. Tissue variations in the dataset pose a major challenge to the teams which they overcome by using color normalization techniques and combining vision transformers with convolutional models. The best model will be productized in the HuBMAP portal to process tissue image datasets at scale in support of Human Reference Atlas construction.

Authors

  • Yashvardhan Jain
    Department of Intelligent Systems Engineering, Luddy School of Informatics, Computing, and Engineering, Indiana University, Bloomington, IN, 47408, USA. yashjain@iu.edu.
  • Leah L Godwin
    Department of Intelligent Systems Engineering, Luddy School of Informatics, Computing, and Engineering, Indiana University, Bloomington, IN, 47408, USA.
  • Sripad Joshi
    Department of Intelligent Systems Engineering, Luddy School of Informatics, Computing, and Engineering, Indiana University, Bloomington, IN, 47408, USA.
  • Shriya Mandarapu
    Department of Intelligent Systems Engineering, Luddy School of Informatics, Computing, and Engineering, Indiana University, Bloomington, IN, 47408, USA.
  • Trang Le
    Science for Life Laboratory, School of Engineering Sciences in Chemistry, Biotechnology and Health, KTH - Royal Institute of Technology, Stockholm, Sweden.
  • Cecilia Lindskog
    Department of Immunology, Genetics, and Pathology, Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden.
  • Emma Lundberg
    Science for Life Laboratory, School of Engineering Sciences in Chemistry, Biotechnology and Health, KTH - Royal Institute of Technology, Stockholm, Sweden.
  • Katy Börner
    Luddy School of Informatics, Computing, and Engineering, Indiana University, Bloomington, IN, United States of America.