IVAug 11, 2023
A Hierarchical Descriptor Framework for On-the-Fly Anatomical Location Matching between Longitudinal StudiesHalid Ziya Yerebakan, Yoshihisa Shinagawa, Mahesh Ranganath et al.
We propose a method to match anatomical locations between pairs of medical images in longitudinal comparisons. The matching is made possible by computing a descriptor of the query point in a source image based on a hierarchical sparse sampling of image intensities that encode the location information. Then, a hierarchical search operation finds the corresponding point with the most similar descriptor in the target image. This simple yet powerful strategy reduces the computational time of mapping points to a millisecond scale on a single CPU. Thus, radiologists can compare similar anatomical locations in near real-time without requiring extra architectural costs for precomputing or storing deformation fields from registrations. Our algorithm does not require prior training, resampling, segmentation, or affine transformation steps. We have tested our algorithm on the recently published Deep Lesion Tracking dataset annotations. We observed more accurate matching compared to Deep Lesion Tracker while being 24 times faster than the most precise algorithm reported therein. We also investigated the matching accuracy on CT and MR modalities and compared the proposed algorithm's accuracy against ground truth consolidated from multiple radiologists.
CVNov 11, 2025
Fast Multi-Organ Fine Segmentation in CT Images with Hierarchical Sparse Sampling and Residual TransformerXueqi Guo, Halid Ziya Yerebakan, Yoshihisa Shinagawa et al.
Multi-organ segmentation of 3D medical images is fundamental with meaningful applications in various clinical automation pipelines. Although deep learning has achieved superior performance, the time and memory consumption of segmenting the entire 3D volume voxel by voxel using neural networks can be huge. Classifiers have been developed as an alternative in cases with certain points of interest, but the trade-off between speed and accuracy remains an issue. Thus, we propose a novel fast multi-organ segmentation framework with the usage of hierarchical sparse sampling and a Residual Transformer. Compared with whole-volume analysis, the hierarchical sparse sampling strategy could successfully reduce computation time while preserving a meaningful hierarchical context utilizing multiple resolution levels. The architecture of the Residual Transformer segmentation network could extract and combine information from different levels of information in the sparse descriptor while maintaining a low computational cost. In an internal data set containing 10,253 CT images and the public dataset TotalSegmentator, the proposed method successfully improved qualitative and quantitative segmentation performance compared to the current fast organ classifier, with fast speed at the level of ~2.24 seconds on CPU hardware. The potential of achieving real-time fine organ segmentation is suggested.
LGJan 25, 2023
Deep Generative Neural Embeddings for High Dimensional Data VisualizationHalid Ziya Yerebakan, Gerardo Hermosillo Valadez
We propose a visualization technique that utilizes neural network embeddings and a generative network to reconstruct original data. This method allows for independent manipulation of individual image embeddings through its non-parametric structure, providing more flexibility than traditional autoencoder approaches. We have evaluated the effectiveness of this technique in data visualization and compared it to t-SNE and VAE methods. Furthermore, we have demonstrated the scalability of our method through visualizations on the ImageNet dataset. Our technique has potential applications in human-in-the-loop training, as it allows for independent editing of embedding locations without affecting the optimization process.
CVApr 29, 2024
Real Time Multi Organ Classification on Computed Tomography ImagesHalid Ziya Yerebakan, Yoshihisa Shinagawa, Gerardo Hermosillo Valadez
Organ segmentation is a fundamental task in medical imaging since it is useful for many clinical automation pipelines. However, some tasks do not require full segmentation. Instead, a classifier can identify the selected organ without segmenting the entire volume. In this study, we demonstrate a classifier based method to obtain organ labels in real time by using a large context size with a sparse data sampling strategy. Although our method operates as an independent classifier at query locations, it can generate full segmentations by querying grid locations at any resolution, offering faster performance than segmentation algorithms. We compared our method with existing segmentation techniques, demonstrating its superior runtime potential for practical applications in medical imaging.
CVJul 31, 2025
Consistent Point MatchingHalid Ziya Yerebakan, Gerardo Hermosillo Valadez
This study demonstrates that incorporating a consistency heuristic into the point-matching algorithm \cite{yerebakan2023hierarchical} improves robustness in matching anatomical locations across pairs of medical images. We validated our approach on diverse longitudinal internal and public datasets spanning CT and MRI modalities. Notably, it surpasses state-of-the-art results on the Deep Lesion Tracking dataset. Additionally, we show that the method effectively addresses landmark localization. The algorithm operates efficiently on standard CPU hardware and allows configurable trade-offs between speed and robustness. The method enables high-precision navigation between medical images without requiring a machine learning model or training data.
CVMay 12, 2025
BodyGPS: Anatomical Positioning SystemHalid Ziya Yerebakan, Kritika Iyer, Xueqi Guo et al.
We introduce a new type of foundational model for parsing human anatomy in medical images that works for different modalities. It supports supervised or unsupervised training and can perform matching, registration, classification, or segmentation with or without user interaction. We achieve this by training a neural network estimator that maps query locations to atlas coordinates via regression. Efficiency is improved by sparsely sampling the input, enabling response times of less than 1 ms without additional accelerator hardware. We demonstrate the utility of the algorithm in both CT and MRI modalities.
CVOct 16, 2024
Automatic Mapping of Anatomical Landmarks from Free-Text Using Large Language Models: Insights from Llama-2Mohamad Abdi, Gerardo Hermosillo Valadez, Halid Ziya Yerebakan
Anatomical landmarks are vital in medical imaging for navigation and anomaly detection. Modern large language models (LLMs), like Llama-2, offer promise for automating the mapping of these landmarks in free-text radiology reports to corresponding positions in image data. Recent studies propose LLMs may develop coherent representations of generative processes. Motivated by these insights, we investigated whether LLMs accurately represent the spatial positions of anatomical landmarks. Through experiments with Llama-2 models, we found that they can linearly represent anatomical landmarks in space with considerable robustness to different prompts. These results underscore the potential of LLMs to enhance the efficiency and accuracy of medical imaging workflows.
CLJun 23, 2020
Supervised Understanding of Word EmbeddingsHalid Ziya Yerebakan, Parmeet Bhatia, Yoshihisa Shinagawa
Pre-trained word embeddings are widely used for transfer learning in natural language processing. The embeddings are continuous and distributed representations of the words that preserve their similarities in compact Euclidean spaces. However, the dimensions of these spaces do not provide any clear interpretation. In this study, we have obtained supervised projections in the form of the linear keyword-level classifiers on word embeddings. We have shown that the method creates interpretable projections of original embedding dimensions. Activations of the trained classifier nodes correspond to a subset of the words in the vocabulary. Thus, they behave similarly to the dictionary features while having the merit of continuous value output. Additionally, such dictionaries can be grown iteratively with multiple rounds by adding expert labels on top-scoring words to an initial collection of the keywords. Also, the same classifiers can be applied to aligned word embeddings in other languages to obtain corresponding dictionaries. In our experiments, we have shown that initializing higher-order networks with these classifier weights gives more accurate models for downstream NLP tasks. We further demonstrate the usefulness of supervised dimensions in revealing the polysemous nature of a keyword of interest by projecting it's embedding using learned classifiers in different sub-spaces.
CLJan 20, 2016
Hierarchical Latent Word ClusteringHalid Ziya Yerebakan, Fitsum Reda, Yiqiang Zhan et al.
This paper presents a new Bayesian non-parametric model by extending the usage of Hierarchical Dirichlet Allocation to extract tree structured word clusters from text data. The inference algorithm of the model collects words in a cluster if they share similar distribution over documents. In our experiments, we observed meaningful hierarchical structures on NIPS corpus and radiology reports collected from public repositories.