Liangqiao Gui

2papers

2 Papers

AISep 22, 2024
An Uncertainty-Aware Generalization Framework for Cardiovascular Image Segmentation

Ting Yu Tsai, Liangqiao Gui, Yineng Chen et al.

Deep learning models have achieved significant success in segmenting cardiovascular structures, but there is a growing need to improve their generalization and robustness. Current methods often face challenges such as overfitting and limited accuracy, largely due to their reliance on large annotated datasets and limited optimization techniques. This paper introduces the UU-Mamba model, an extension of the U-Mamba architecture, designed to address these challenges in both cardiac and vascular segmentation. By incorporating Sharpness-Aware Minimization (SAM), the model enhances generalization by seeking flatter minima in the loss landscape. Additionally, we propose an uncertainty-aware loss function that integrates region-based, distribution-based, and pixel-based components, improving segmentation accuracy by capturing both local and global features. We expand our evaluations on the ImageCAS (coronary artery) and Aorta (aortic branches and zones) datasets, which present more complex segmentation challenges than the ACDC dataset (left and right ventricles) used in prior work, showcasing the model's adaptability and resilience. Our results confirm UU-Mamba's superior performance compared to leading models such as TransUNet, Swin-Unet, nnUNet, and nnFormer. We also provide a more in-depth assessment of the model's robustness and segmentation accuracy through extensive experiments.

74.3CVApr 7
Evidence-Based Actor-Verifier Reasoning for Echocardiographic Agents

Peng Huang, Yiming Wang, Yineng Chen et al.

Echocardiography plays an important role in the screening and diagnosis of cardiovascular diseases. However, automated intelligent analysis of echocardiographic data remains challenging due to complex cardiac dynamics and strong view heterogeneity. In recent years, visual language models (VLM) have opened a new avenue for building ultrasound understanding systems for clinical decision support. Nevertheless, most existing methods formulate this task as a direct mapping from video and question to answer, making them vulnerable to template shortcuts and spurious explanations. To address these issues, we propose EchoTrust, an evidence-driven Actor-Verifier framework for trustworthy reasoning in echocardiography VLM-based agents. EchoTrust produces a structured intermediate representation that is subsequently analyzed by distinct roles, enabling more reliable and interpretable decision-making for high-stakes clinical applications.