Jingxian Li

2papers

2 Papers

CVJun 3, 2022
MetaLR: Meta-tuning of Learning Rates for Transfer Learning in Medical Imaging

Yixiong Chen, Li Liu, Jingxian Li et al.

In medical image analysis, transfer learning is a powerful method for deep neural networks (DNNs) to generalize well on limited medical data. Prior efforts have focused on developing pre-training algorithms on domains such as lung ultrasound, chest X-ray, and liver CT to bridge domain gaps. However, we find that model fine-tuning also plays a crucial role in adapting medical knowledge to target tasks. The common fine-tuning method is manually picking transferable layers (e.g., the last few layers) to update, which is labor-expensive. In this work, we propose a meta-learning-based LR tuner, named MetaLR, to make different layers automatically co-adapt to downstream tasks based on their transferabilities across domains. MetaLR learns appropriate LRs for different layers in an online manner, preventing highly transferable layers from forgetting their medical representation abilities and driving less transferable layers to adapt actively to new domains. Extensive experiments on various medical applications show that MetaLR outperforms previous state-of-the-art (SOTA) fine-tuning strategies. Codes are released.

CVDec 1, 2022
Rethinking Two Consensuses of the Transferability in Deep Learning

Yixiong Chen, Jingxian Li, Chris Ding et al.

Deep transfer learning (DTL) has formed a long-term quest toward enabling deep neural networks (DNNs) to reuse historical experiences as efficiently as humans. This ability is named knowledge transferability. A commonly used paradigm for DTL is firstly learning general knowledge (pre-training) and then reusing (fine-tuning) them for a specific target task. There are two consensuses of transferability of pre-trained DNNs: (1) a larger domain gap between pre-training and downstream data brings lower transferability; (2) the transferability gradually decreases from lower layers (near input) to higher layers (near output). However, these consensuses were basically drawn from the experiments based on natural images, which limits their scope of application. This work aims to study and complement them from a broader perspective by proposing a method to measure the transferability of pre-trained DNN parameters. Our experiments on twelve diverse image classification datasets get similar conclusions to the previous consensuses. More importantly, two new findings are presented, i.e., (1) in addition to the domain gap, a larger data amount and huge dataset diversity of downstream target task also prohibit the transferability; (2) although the lower layers learn basic image features, they are usually not the most transferable layers due to their domain sensitivity.