Yuqi Qian

2papers

2 Papers

IVApr 28, 2023
3D Brainformer: 3D Fusion Transformer for Brain Tumor Segmentation

Rui Nian, Guoyao Zhang, Yao Sui et al.

Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is critically important for brain mapping in both scientific research and clinical studies. Precise segmentation of brain tumors facilitates clinical diagnosis, evaluations, and surgical planning. Deep learning has recently emerged to improve brain tumor segmentation and achieved impressive results. Convolutional architectures are widely used to implement those neural networks. By the nature of limited receptive fields, however, those architectures are subject to representing long-range spatial dependencies of the voxel intensities in MRI images. Transformers have been leveraged recently to address the above limitations of convolutional networks. Unfortunately, the majority of current Transformers-based methods in segmentation are performed with 2D MRI slices, instead of 3D volumes. Moreover, it is difficult to incorporate the structures between layers because each head is calculated independently in the Multi-Head Self-Attention mechanism (MHSA). In this work, we proposed a 3D Transformer-based segmentation approach. We developed a Fusion-Head Self-Attention mechanism (FHSA) to combine each attention head through attention logic and weight mapping, for the exploration of the long-range spatial dependencies in 3D MRI images. We implemented a plug-and-play self-attention module, named the Infinite Deformable Fusion Transformer Module (IDFTM), to extract features on any deformable feature maps. We applied our approach to the task of brain tumor segmentation, and assessed it on the public BRATS datasets. The experimental results demonstrated that our proposed approach achieved superior performance, in comparison to several state-of-the-art segmentation methods.

5.9CRMar 10
ShapeMark: Robust and Diversity-Preserving Watermarking for Diffusion Models

Yuqi Qian, Yun Cao, Haocheng Fu et al.

Diffusion models have made substantial advances in recent years, enabling high-quality image synthesis; however, the widespread dissemination and reuse of their outputs have introduced new challenges in intellectual property protection and content provenance. Image watermarking offers a solution to these challenges, and recent work has increasingly explored Noise-as-Watermark (NaW) approaches that integrate watermarking directly into the diffusion process. However, existing NaW methods fail to balance robustness and diversity. We attribute this weakness to value encoding, which encodes watermark bits into individual sampled values. It is extremely fragile in practical application scenarios. To address this, we encode watermark bits into the structured noise pattern, so that the watermark is preserved even when individual values are perturbed. To further ensure generation diversity, we introduce a dedicated randomization design that reshuffles the positions of noise elements without changing their values, preventing the watermark from inducing fixed noise patterns or spatial locations. Extensive experiments demonstrate that our method achieves state-of-the-art robustness while maintaining high generation quality across a wide range of lossy scenarios.