Coarse-Refined Consistency Learning Using Pixel-Level Features for Semi-Supervised Medical Image Segmentation.

Journal: IEEE journal of biomedical and health informatics
Published Date:

Abstract

Pixel-level annotations are extremely expensive for medical image segmentation tasks as both expertise and time are needed to generate accurate annotations. Semi-supervised learning (SSL) for medical image segmentation has recently attracted growing attention because it can alleviate the exhausting manual annotations for clinicians by leveraging unlabeled data. However, most of the existing SSL methods do not take pixel-level information (e.g., pixel-level features) of labeled data into account, i.e., the labeled data are underutilized. Hence, in this work, an innovative Coarse-Refined Network with pixel-wise Intra-patch ranked loss and patch-wise Inter-patch ranked loss (CRII-Net) is proposed. It provides three advantages: i) it can produce stable targets for unlabeled data, as a simple yet effective coarse-refined consistency constraint is designed; ii) it is very effective for the extreme case where very scarce labeled data are available, as the pixel-level and patch-level features are extracted by our CRII-Net; and iii) it can output fine-grained segmentation results for hard regions (e.g., blurred object boundaries and low-contrast lesions), as the proposed Intra-Patch Ranked Loss (Intra-PRL) focuses on object boundaries and Inter-Patch Ranked loss (Inter-PRL) mitigates the adverse impact of low-contrast lesions. Experimental results on two common SSL tasks for medical image segmentation demonstrate the superiority of our CRII-Net. Specifically, when there are only 4% labeled data, our CRII-Net improves the Dice similarity coefficient (DSC) score by at least 7.49% when compared to five classical or state-of-the-art (SOTA) SSL methods. For hard samples/regions, our CRII-Net also significantly outperforms other compared methods in both quantitative and visualization results.

Authors

  • Jie Du
    Department of Computer and Information Science, University of Macau, Macau. Electronic address: yb57415@umac.mo.
  • Xiaoci Zhang
  • Peng Liu
    Department of Clinical Pharmacy, Dazhou Central Hospital, Dazhou 635000, China.
  • Tianfu Wang
    School of Biomedical Engineering, Shenzhen University Health Sciences Center, Shenzhen, Guangdong 518060, P.R.China.