IVJul 15, 2023
HQG-Net: Unpaired Medical Image Enhancement with High-Quality GuidanceChunming He, Kai Li, Guoxia Xu et al. · eth-zurich
Unpaired Medical Image Enhancement (UMIE) aims to transform a low-quality (LQ) medical image into a high-quality (HQ) one without relying on paired images for training. While most existing approaches are based on Pix2Pix/CycleGAN and are effective to some extent, they fail to explicitly use HQ information to guide the enhancement process, which can lead to undesired artifacts and structural distortions. In this paper, we propose a novel UMIE approach that avoids the above limitation of existing methods by directly encoding HQ cues into the LQ enhancement process in a variational fashion and thus model the UMIE task under the joint distribution between the LQ and HQ domains. Specifically, we extract features from an HQ image and explicitly insert the features, which are expected to encode HQ cues, into the enhancement network to guide the LQ enhancement with the variational normalization module. We train the enhancement network adversarially with a discriminator to ensure the generated HQ image falls into the HQ domain. We further propose a content-aware loss to guide the enhancement process with wavelet-based pixel-level and multi-encoder-based feature-level constraints. Additionally, as a key motivation for performing image enhancement is to make the enhanced images serve better for downstream tasks, we propose a bi-level learning scheme to optimize the UMIE task and downstream tasks cooperatively, helping generate HQ images both visually appealing and favorable for downstream tasks. Experiments on three medical datasets, including two newly collected datasets, verify that the proposed method outperforms existing techniques in terms of both enhancement quality and downstream task performance. We will make the code and the newly collected datasets publicly available for community study.
LGApr 10, 2023Code
Uncertainty-driven Trajectory Truncation for Data Augmentation in Offline Reinforcement LearningJunjie Zhang, Jiafei Lyu, Xiaoteng Ma et al.
Equipped with the trained environmental dynamics, model-based offline reinforcement learning (RL) algorithms can often successfully learn good policies from fixed-sized datasets, even some datasets with poor quality. Unfortunately, however, it can not be guaranteed that the generated samples from the trained dynamics model are reliable (e.g., some synthetic samples may lie outside of the support region of the static dataset). To address this issue, we propose Trajectory Truncation with Uncertainty (TATU), which adaptively truncates the synthetic trajectory if the accumulated uncertainty along the trajectory is too large. We theoretically show the performance bound of TATU to justify its benefits. To empirically show the advantages of TATU, we first combine it with two classical model-based offline RL algorithms, MOPO and COMBO. Furthermore, we integrate TATU with several off-the-shelf model-free offline RL algorithms, e.g., BCQ. Experimental results on the D4RL benchmark show that TATU significantly improves their performance, often by a large margin. Code is available here.
CVMay 25, 2022Code
UniInst: Unique Representation for End-to-End Instance SegmentationYimin Ou, Rui Yang, Lufan Ma et al.
Existing instance segmentation methods have achieved impressive performance but still suffer from a common dilemma: redundant representations (e.g., multiple boxes, grids, and anchor points) are inferred for one instance, which leads to multiple duplicated predictions. Thus, mainstream methods usually rely on a hand-designed non-maximum suppression (NMS) post-processing step to select the optimal prediction result, which hinders end-to-end training. To address this issue, we propose a box-free and NMS-free end-to-end instance segmentation framework, termed UniInst, that yields only one unique representation for each instance. Specifically, we design an instance-aware one-to-one assignment scheme, namely Only Yield One Representation (OYOR), which dynamically assigns one unique representation to each instance according to the matching quality between predictions and ground truths. Then, a novel prediction re-ranking strategy is elegantly integrated into the framework to address the misalignment between the classification score and the mask quality, enabling the learned representation to be more discriminative. With these techniques, our UniInst, the first FCN-based box-free and NMS-free instance segmentation framework, achieves competitive performance, e.g., 39.0 mask AP using ResNet-50-FPN and 40.2 mask AP using ResNet-101-FPN, against mainstream methods on COCO test-dev 2017. Moreover, the proposed instance-aware method is robust to occlusion scenes, outperforming common baselines by remarkable mask AP on the heavily-occluded OCHuman benchmark. Code is available at https://github.com/b03505036/UniInst.
IVJul 15, 2022Code
Towards Better Dermoscopic Image Feature Representation Learning for Melanoma ClassificationChengHui Yu, MingKang Tang, ShengGe Yang et al.
Deep learning-based melanoma classification with dermoscopic images has recently shown great potential in automatic early-stage melanoma diagnosis. However, limited by the significant data imbalance and obvious extraneous artifacts, i.e., the hair and ruler markings, discriminative feature extraction from dermoscopic images is very challenging. In this study, we seek to resolve these problems respectively towards better representation learning for lesion features. Specifically, a GAN-based data augmentation (GDA) strategy is adapted to generate synthetic melanoma-positive images, in conjunction with the proposed implicit hair denoising (IHD) strategy. Wherein the hair-related representations are implicitly disentangled via an auxiliary classifier network and reversely sent to the melanoma-feature extraction backbone for better melanoma-specific representation learning. Furthermore, to train the IHD module, the hair noises are additionally labeled on the ISIC2020 dataset, making it the first large-scale dermoscopic dataset with annotation of hair-like artifacts. Extensive experiments demonstrate the superiority of the proposed framework as well as the effectiveness of each component. The improved dataset publicly avaliable at https://github.com/kirtsy/DermoscopicDataset.
IVJun 15, 2022
Seeking Common Ground While Reserving Differences: Multiple Anatomy Collaborative Framework for Undersampled MRI ReconstructionJiangpeng Yan, Chenghui Yu, Hanbo Chen et al.
Recently, deep neural networks have greatly advanced undersampled Magnetic Resonance Image (MRI) reconstruction, wherein most studies follow the one-anatomy-one-network fashion, i.e., each expert network is trained and evaluated for a specific anatomy. Apart from inefficiency in training multiple independent models, such convention ignores the shared de-aliasing knowledge across various anatomies which can benefit each other. To explore the shared knowledge, one naive way is to combine all the data from various anatomies to train an all-round network. Unfortunately, despite the existence of the shared de-aliasing knowledge, we reveal that the exclusive knowledge across different anatomies can deteriorate specific reconstruction targets, yielding overall performance degradation. Observing this, in this study, we present a novel deep MRI reconstruction framework with both anatomy-shared and anatomy-specific parameterized learners, aiming to "seek common ground while reserving differences" across different anatomies.Particularly, the primary anatomy-shared learners are exposed to different anatomies to model flourishing shared knowledge, while the efficient anatomy-specific learners are trained with their target anatomy for exclusive knowledge. Four different implementations of anatomy-specific learners are presented and explored on the top of our framework in two MRI reconstruction networks. Comprehensive experiments on brain, knee and cardiac MRI datasets demonstrate that three of these learners are able to enhance reconstruction performance via multiple anatomy collaborative learning.
CVNov 26, 2022
Human-machine Interactive Tissue Prototype Learning for Label-efficient Histopathology Image SegmentationWentao Pan, Jiangpeng Yan, Hanbo Chen et al.
Recently, deep neural networks have greatly advanced histopathology image segmentation but usually require abundant annotated data. However, due to the gigapixel scale of whole slide images and pathologists' heavy daily workload, obtaining pixel-level labels for supervised learning in clinical practice is often infeasible. Alternatively, weakly-supervised segmentation methods have been explored with less laborious image-level labels, but their performance is unsatisfactory due to the lack of dense supervision. Inspired by the recent success of self-supervised learning methods, we present a label-efficient tissue prototype dictionary building pipeline and propose to use the obtained prototypes to guide histopathology image segmentation. Particularly, taking advantage of self-supervised contrastive learning, an encoder is trained to project the unlabeled histopathology image patches into a discriminative embedding space where these patches are clustered to identify the tissue prototypes by efficient pathologists' visual examination. Then, the encoder is used to map the images into the embedding space and generate pixel-level pseudo tissue masks by querying the tissue prototype dictionary. Finally, the pseudo masks are used to train a segmentation network with dense supervision for better performance. Experiments on two public datasets demonstrate that our human-machine interactive tissue prototype learning method can achieve comparable segmentation performance as the fully-supervised baselines with less annotation burden and outperform other weakly-supervised methods. Codes will be available upon publication.
86.8LGMar 26Code
From Intent to Evidence: A Categorical Approach for Structural Evaluation of Deep Research AgentsShuoling Liu, Zhiquan Tan, Kun Yi et al.
Although deep research agents (DRAs) have emerged as a promising paradigm for complex information synthesis, their evaluation remains constrained by ad hoc empirical benchmarks. These heuristic approaches do not rigorously model agent behavior or adequately stress-test long-horizon synthesis and ambiguity resolution. To bridge this gap, we formalize DRA behavior through the lens of category theory, modeling deep research workflow as a composition of structure-preserving maps (functors). Grounded in this theoretical framework, we introduce a novel mechanism-aware benchmark with 296 questions designed to stress-test agents along four interpretable axes: traversing sequential connectivity chains, verifying intersections within V-structure pullbacks, imposing topological ordering on retrieved substructures, and performing ontological falsification via the Yoneda Probe. Our rigorous evaluation of 11 leading models establishes a persistently low baseline, with the state-of-the-art achieving only a 19.9\% average accuracy, exposing the difficulty of formal structural stress-testing. Furthermore, our findings reveal a stark dichotomy in the current AI capabilities. While advanced deep research pipelines successfully redefine dynamic topological re-ordering and exhibit robust ontological verification -- matching pure reasoning models in falsifying hallucinated premises -- they almost universally collapse on multi-hop structural synthesis. Crucially, massive performance variance across tasks exposes a lingering reliance on brittle heuristics rather than a systemic understanding. Ultimately, this work demonstrates that while top-tier autonomous agents can now organically unify search and reasoning, achieving a generalized mastery over complex structural information remains a formidable open challenge.\footnote{Our implementation will be available at https://github.com/tzq1999/CDR.
CVDec 29, 2025
Bridging Cognitive Gap: Hierarchical Description Learning for Artistic Image Aesthetics AssessmentHenglin Liu, Nisha Huang, Chang Liu et al.
The aesthetic quality assessment task is crucial for developing a human-aligned quantitative evaluation system for AIGC. However, its inherently complex nature, spanning visual perception, cognition, and emotion, poses fundamental challenges. Although aesthetic descriptions offer a viable representation of this complexity, two critical challenges persist: (1) data scarcity and imbalance: existing dataset overly focuses on visual perception and neglects deeper dimensions due to the expensive manual annotation; and (2) model fragmentation: current visual networks isolate aesthetic attributes with multi-branch encoder, while multimodal methods represented by contrastive learning struggle to effectively process long-form textual descriptions. To resolve challenge (1), we first present the Refined Aesthetic Description (RAD) dataset, a large-scale (70k), multi-dimensional structured dataset, generated via an iterative pipeline without heavy annotation costs and easy to scale. To address challenge (2), we propose ArtQuant, an aesthetics assessment framework for artistic images which not only couples isolated aesthetic dimensions through joint description generation, but also better models long-text semantics with the help of LLM decoders. Besides, theoretical analysis confirms this symbiosis: RAD's semantic adequacy (data) and generation paradigm (model) collectively minimize prediction entropy, providing mathematical grounding for the framework. Our approach achieves state-of-the-art performance on several datasets while requiring only 33% of conventional training epochs, narrowing the cognitive gap between artistic images and aesthetic judgment. We will release both code and dataset to support future research.
CPJul 7, 2025Code
Advancing Financial Engineering with Foundation Models: Progress, Applications, and ChallengesLiyuan Chen, Shuoling Liu, Jiangpeng Yan et al.
The advent of foundation models (FMs) - large-scale pre-trained models with strong generalization capabilities - has opened new frontiers for financial engineering. While general-purpose FMs such as GPT-4 and Gemini have demonstrated promising performance in tasks ranging from financial report summarization to sentiment-aware forecasting, many financial applications remain constrained by unique domain requirements such as multimodal reasoning, regulatory compliance, and data privacy. These challenges have spurred the emergence of Financial Foundation Models (FFMs) - a new class of models explicitly designed for finance. This survey presents a comprehensive overview of FFMs, with a taxonomy spanning three key modalities: Financial Language Foundation Models (FinLFMs), Financial Time-Series Foundation Models (FinTSFMs), and Financial Visual-Language Foundation Models (FinVLFMs). We review their architectures, training methodologies, datasets, and real-world applications. Furthermore, we identify critical challenges in data availability, algorithmic scalability, and infrastructure constraints, and offer insights into future research opportunities. We hope this survey serves as both a comprehensive reference for understanding FFMs and a practical roadmap for future innovation. An updated collection of FFM-related publications and resources will be maintained on our website https://github.com/FinFM/Awesome-FinFMs.
IVFeb 18, 2022Code
Towards better understanding and better generalization of few-shot classification in histology images with contrastive learningJiawei Yang, Hanbo Chen, Jiangpeng Yan et al.
Few-shot learning is an established topic in natural images for years, but few work is attended to histology images, which is of high clinical value since well-labeled datasets and rare abnormal samples are expensive to collect. Here, we facilitate the study of few-shot learning in histology images by setting up three cross-domain tasks that simulate real clinics problems. To enable label-efficient learning and better generalizability, we propose to incorporate contrastive learning (CL) with latent augmentation (LA) to build a few-shot system. CL learns useful representations without manual labels, while LA transfers semantic variations of the base dataset in an unsupervised way. These two components fully exploit unlabeled training data and can scale gracefully to other label-hungry problems. In experiments, we find i) models learned by CL generalize better than supervised learning for histology images in unseen classes, and ii) LA brings consistent gains over baselines. Prior studies of self-supervised learning mainly focus on ImageNet-like images, which only present a dominant object in their centers. Recent attention has been paid to images with multi-objects and multi-textures. Histology images are a natural choice for such a study. We show the superiority of CL over supervised learning in terms of generalization for such data and provide our empirical understanding for this observation. The findings in this work could contribute to understanding how the model generalizes in the context of both representation learning and histological image analysis. Code is available.
CVDec 9, 2021Code
Implicit Feature Refinement for Instance SegmentationLufan Ma, Tiancai Wang, Bin Dong et al.
We propose a novel implicit feature refinement module for high-quality instance segmentation. Existing image/video instance segmentation methods rely on explicitly stacked convolutions to refine instance features before the final prediction. In this paper, we first give an empirical comparison of different refinement strategies,which reveals that the widely-used four consecutive convolutions are not necessary. As an alternative, weight-sharing convolution blocks provides competitive performance. When such block is iterated for infinite times, the block output will eventually convergeto an equilibrium state. Based on this observation, the implicit feature refinement (IFR) is developed by constructing an implicit function. The equilibrium state of instance features can be obtained by fixed-point iteration via a simulated infinite-depth network. Our IFR enjoys several advantages: 1) simulates an infinite-depth refinement network while only requiring parameters of single residual block; 2) produces high-level equilibrium instance features of global receptive field; 3) serves as a plug-and-play general module easily extended to most object recognition frameworks. Experiments on the COCO and YouTube-VIS benchmarks show that our IFR achieves improved performance on state-of-the-art image/video instance segmentation frameworks, while reducing the parameter burden (e.g.1% AP improvement on Mask R-CNN with only 30.0% parameters in mask head). Code is made available at https://github.com/lufanma/IFR.git
IVFeb 22, 2020Code
Neural Architecture Search for Compressed Sensing Magnetic Resonance Image ReconstructionJiangpeng Yan, Shuo Chen, Yongbing Zhang et al.
Recent works have demonstrated that deep learning (DL) based compressed sensing (CS) implementation can accelerate Magnetic Resonance (MR) Imaging by reconstructing MR images from sub-sampled k-space data. However, network architectures adopted in previous methods are all designed by handcraft. Neural Architecture Search (NAS) algorithms can automatically build neural network architectures which have outperformed human designed ones in several vision tasks. Inspired by this, here we proposed a novel and efficient network for the MR image reconstruction problem via NAS instead of manual attempts. Particularly, a specific cell structure, which was integrated into the model-driven MR reconstruction pipeline, was automatically searched from a flexible pre-defined operation search space in a differentiable manner. Experimental results show that our searched network can produce better reconstruction results compared to previous state-of-the-art methods in terms of PSNR and SSIM with 4-6 times fewer computation resources. Extensive experiments were conducted to analyze how hyper-parameters affect reconstruction performance and the searched structures. The generalizability of the searched architecture was also evaluated on different organ MR datasets. Our proposed method can reach a better trade-off between computation cost and reconstruction performance for MR reconstruction problem with good generalizability and offer insights to design neural networks for other medical image applications. The evaluation code will be available at https://github.com/yjump/NAS-for-CSMRI.
65.9LGMar 18
CN-Buzz2Portfolio: A Chinese-Market Dataset and Benchmark for LLM-Based Macro and Sector Asset Allocation from Daily Trending Financial NewsLiyuan Chen, Shilong Li, Jiangpeng Yan et al.
Large Language Models (LLMs) are rapidly transitioning from static Natural Language Processing (NLP) tasks including sentiment analysis and event extraction to acting as dynamic decision-making agents in complex financial environments. However, the evolution of LLMs into autonomous financial agents faces a significant dilemma in evaluation paradigms. Direct live trading is irreproducible and prone to outcome bias by confounding luck with skill, whereas existing static benchmarks are often confined to entity-level stock picking and ignore broader market attention. To facilitate the rigorous analysis of these challenges, we introduce CN-Buzz2Portfolio, a reproducible benchmark grounded in the Chinese market that maps daily trending news to macro and sector asset allocation. Spanning a rolling horizon from 2024 to mid-2025, our dataset simulates a realistic public attention stream, requiring agents to distill investment logic from high-exposure narratives instead of pre-filtered entity news. We propose a Tri-Stage CPA Agent Workflow involving Compression, Perception, and Allocation to evaluate LLMs on broad asset classes such as Exchange Traded Funds (ETFs) rather than individual stocks, thereby reducing idiosyncratic volatility. Extensive experiments on nine LLMs reveal significant disparities in how models translate macro-level narratives into portfolio weights. This work provides new insights into the alignment between general reasoning and financial decision-making, and all data, codes, and experiments are released to promote sustainable financial agent research.
LGFeb 14, 2025
Ten Challenging Problems in Federated Foundation ModelsTao Fan, Hanlin Gu, Xuemei Cao et al.
Federated Foundation Models (FedFMs) represent a distributed learning paradigm that fuses general competences of foundation models as well as privacy-preserving capabilities of federated learning. This combination allows the large foundation models and the small local domain models at the remote clients to learn from each other in a teacher-student learning setting. This paper provides a comprehensive summary of the ten challenging problems inherent in FedFMs, encompassing foundational theory, utilization of private data, continual learning, unlearning, Non-IID and graph data, bidirectional knowledge transfer, incentive mechanism design, game mechanism design, model watermarking, and efficiency. The ten challenging problems manifest in five pivotal aspects: ``Foundational Theory," which aims to establish a coherent and unifying theoretical framework for FedFMs. ``Data," addressing the difficulties in leveraging domain-specific knowledge from private data while maintaining privacy; ``Heterogeneity," examining variations in data, model, and computational resources across clients; ``Security and Privacy," focusing on defenses against malicious attacks and model theft; and ``Efficiency," highlighting the need for improvements in training, communication, and parameter efficiency. For each problem, we offer a clear mathematical definition on the objective function, analyze existing methods, and discuss the key challenges and potential solutions. This in-depth exploration aims to advance the theoretical foundations of FedFMs, guide practical implementations, and inspire future research to overcome these obstacles, thereby enabling the robust, efficient, and privacy-preserving FedFMs in various real-world applications.
CVDec 14, 2023
Semi-supervised Semantic Segmentation Meets Masked Modeling:Fine-grained Locality Learning Matters in Consistency RegularizationWentao Pan, Zhe Xu, Jiangpeng Yan et al. · tencent-ai
Semi-supervised semantic segmentation aims to utilize limited labeled images and abundant unlabeled images to achieve label-efficient learning, wherein the weak-to-strong consistency regularization framework, popularized by FixMatch, is widely used as a benchmark scheme. Despite its effectiveness, we observe that such scheme struggles with satisfactory segmentation for the local regions. This can be because it originally stems from the image classification task and lacks specialized mechanisms to capture fine-grained local semantics that prioritizes in dense prediction. To address this issue, we propose a novel framework called \texttt{MaskMatch}, which enables fine-grained locality learning to achieve better dense segmentation. On top of the original teacher-student framework, we design a masked modeling proxy task that encourages the student model to predict the segmentation given the unmasked image patches (even with 30\% only) and enforces the predictions to be consistent with pseudo-labels generated by the teacher model using the complete image. Such design is motivated by the intuition that if the predictions are more consistent given insufficient neighboring information, stronger fine-grained locality perception is achieved. Besides, recognizing the importance of reliable pseudo-labels in the above locality learning and the original consistency learning scheme, we design a multi-scale ensembling strategy that considers context at different levels of abstraction for pseudo-label generation. Extensive experiments on benchmark datasets demonstrate the superiority of our method against previous approaches and its plug-and-play flexibility.
CVFeb 24, 2022
Assessing generalisability of deep learning-based polyp detection and segmentation methods through a computer vision challengeSharib Ali, Noha Ghatwary, Debesh Jha et al.
Polyps are well-known cancer precursors identified by colonoscopy. However, variability in their size, location, and surface largely affect identification, localisation, and characterisation. Moreover, colonoscopic surveillance and removal of polyps (referred to as polypectomy ) are highly operator-dependent procedures. There exist a high missed detection rate and incomplete removal of colonic polyps due to their variable nature, the difficulties to delineate the abnormality, the high recurrence rates, and the anatomical topography of the colon. There have been several developments in realising automated methods for both detection and segmentation of these polyps using machine learning. However, the major drawback in most of these methods is their ability to generalise to out-of-sample unseen datasets that come from different centres, modalities and acquisition systems. To test this hypothesis rigorously we curated a multi-centre and multi-population dataset acquired from multiple colonoscopy systems and challenged teams comprising machine learning experts to develop robust automated detection and segmentation methods as part of our crowd-sourcing Endoscopic computer vision challenge (EndoCV) 2021. In this paper, we analyse the detection results of the four top (among seven) teams and the segmentation results of the five top teams (among 16). Our analyses demonstrate that the top-ranking teams concentrated on accuracy (i.e., accuracy > 80% on overall Dice score on different validation sets) over real-time performance required for clinical applicability. We further dissect the methods and provide an experiment-based hypothesis that reveals the need for improved generalisability to tackle diversity present in multi-centre datasets.
LGDec 21, 2021
Value Activation for Bias Alleviation: Generalized-activated Deep Double Deterministic Policy GradientsJiafei Lyu, Yu Yang, Jiangpeng Yan et al.
It is vital to accurately estimate the value function in Deep Reinforcement Learning (DRL) such that the agent could execute proper actions instead of suboptimal ones. However, existing actor-critic methods suffer more or less from underestimation bias or overestimation bias, which negatively affect their performance. In this paper, we reveal a simple but effective principle: proper value correction benefits bias alleviation, where we propose the generalized-activated weighting operator that uses any non-decreasing function, namely activation function, as weights for better value estimation. Particularly, we integrate the generalized-activated weighting operator into value estimation and introduce a novel algorithm, Generalized-activated Deep Double Deterministic Policy Gradients (GD3). We theoretically show that GD3 is capable of alleviating the potential estimation bias. We interestingly find that simple activation functions lead to satisfying performance with no additional tricks, and could contribute to faster convergence. Experimental results on numerous challenging continuous control tasks show that GD3 with task-specific activation outperforms the common baseline methods. We also uncover a fact that fine-tuning the polynomial activation function achieves superior results on most of the tasks.
IVSep 28, 2021
All-Around Real Label Supervision: Cyclic Prototype Consistency Learning for Semi-supervised Medical Image SegmentationZhe Xu, Yixin Wang, Donghuan Lu et al.
Semi-supervised learning has substantially advanced medical image segmentation since it alleviates the heavy burden of acquiring the costly expert-examined annotations. Especially, the consistency-based approaches have attracted more attention for their superior performance, wherein the real labels are only utilized to supervise their paired images via supervised loss while the unlabeled images are exploited by enforcing the perturbation-based \textit{"unsupervised"} consistency without explicit guidance from those real labels. However, intuitively, the expert-examined real labels contain more reliable supervision signals. Observing this, we ask an unexplored but interesting question: can we exploit the unlabeled data via explicit real label supervision for semi-supervised training? To this end, we discard the previous perturbation-based consistency but absorb the essence of non-parametric prototype learning. Based on the prototypical network, we then propose a novel cyclic prototype consistency learning (CPCL) framework, which is constructed by a labeled-to-unlabeled (L2U) prototypical forward process and an unlabeled-to-labeled (U2L) backward process. Such two processes synergistically enhance the segmentation network by encouraging more discriminative and compact features. In this way, our framework turns previous \textit{"unsupervised"} consistency into new \textit{"supervised"} consistency, obtaining the \textit{"all-around real label supervision"} property of our method. Extensive experiments on brain tumor segmentation from MRI and kidney segmentation from CT images show that our CPCL can effectively exploit the unlabeled data and outperform other state-of-the-art semi-supervised medical image segmentation methods.
CVJul 6, 2021
Double-Uncertainty Guided Spatial and Temporal Consistency Regularization Weighting for Learning-based Abdominal RegistrationZhe Xu, Jie Luo, Donghuan Lu et al.
In order to tackle the difficulty associated with the ill-posed nature of the image registration problem, regularization is often used to constrain the solution space. For most learning-based registration approaches, the regularization usually has a fixed weight and only constrains the spatial transformation. Such convention has two limitations: (i) Besides the laborious grid search for the optimal fixed weight, the regularization strength of a specific image pair should be associated with the content of the images, thus the "one value fits all" training scheme is not ideal; (ii) Only spatially regularizing the transformation may neglect some informative clues related to the ill-posedness. In this study, we propose a mean-teacher based registration framework, which incorporates an additional temporal consistency regularization term by encouraging the teacher model's prediction to be consistent with that of the student model. More importantly, instead of searching for a fixed weight, the teacher enables automatically adjusting the weights of the spatial regularization and the temporal consistency regularization by taking advantage of the transformation uncertainty and appearance uncertainty. Extensive experiments on the challenging abdominal CT-MRI registration show that our training strategy can promisingly advance the original learning-based method in terms of efficient hyperparameter tuning and a better tradeoff between accuracy and smoothness.
CVJun 18, 2021
A Coarse-to-Fine Instance Segmentation Network with Learning Boundary RepresentationFeng Luo, Bin-Bin Gao, Jiangpeng Yan et al.
Boundary-based instance segmentation has drawn much attention since of its attractive efficiency. However, existing methods suffer from the difficulty in long-distance regression. In this paper, we propose a coarse-to-fine module to address the problem. Approximate boundary points are generated at the coarse stage and then features of these points are sampled and fed to a refined regressor for fine prediction. It is end-to-end trainable since differential sampling operation is well supported in the module. Furthermore, we design a holistic boundary-aware branch and introduce instance-agnostic supervision to assist regression. Equipped with ResNet-101, our approach achieves 31.7\% mask AP on COCO dataset with single-scale training and testing, outperforming the baseline 1.3\% mask AP with less than 1\% additional parameters and GFLOPs. Experiments also show that our proposed method achieves competitive performance compared to existing boundary-based methods with a lightweight design and a simple pipeline.
LGJun 6, 2021
Efficient Continuous Control with Double Actors and Regularized CriticsJiafei Lyu, Xiaoteng Ma, Jiangpeng Yan et al.
How to obtain good value estimation is one of the key problems in Reinforcement Learning (RL). Current value estimation methods, such as DDPG and TD3, suffer from unnecessary over- or underestimation bias. In this paper, we explore the potential of double actors, which has been neglected for a long time, for better value function estimation in continuous setting. First, we uncover and demonstrate the bias alleviation property of double actors by building double actors upon single critic and double critics to handle overestimation bias in DDPG and underestimation bias in TD3 respectively. Next, we interestingly find that double actors help improve the exploration ability of the agent. Finally, to mitigate the uncertainty of value estimate from double critics, we further propose to regularize the critic networks under double actors architecture, which gives rise to Double Actors Regularized Critics (DARC) algorithm. Extensive experimental results on challenging continuous control tasks show that DARC significantly outperforms state-of-the-art methods with higher sample efficiency.
LGFeb 25, 2021
Bias-reduced Multi-step Hindsight Experience Replay for Efficient Multi-goal Reinforcement LearningRui Yang, Jiafei Lyu, Yu Yang et al.
Multi-goal reinforcement learning is widely applied in planning and robot manipulation. Two main challenges in multi-goal reinforcement learning are sparse rewards and sample inefficiency. Hindsight Experience Replay (HER) aims to tackle the two challenges via goal relabeling. However, HER-related works still need millions of samples and a huge computation. In this paper, we propose Multi-step Hindsight Experience Replay (MHER), incorporating multi-step relabeled returns based on $n$-step relabeling to improve sample efficiency. Despite the advantages of $n$-step relabeling, we theoretically and experimentally prove the off-policy $n$-step bias introduced by $n$-step relabeling may lead to poor performance in many environments. To address the above issue, two bias-reduced MHER algorithms, MHER($λ$) and Model-based MHER (MMHER) are presented. MHER($λ$) exploits the $λ$ return while MMHER benefits from model-based value expansions. Experimental results on numerous multi-goal robotic tasks show that our solutions can successfully alleviate off-policy $n$-step bias and achieve significantly higher sample efficiency than HER and Curriculum-guided HER with little additional computation beyond HER.
CVNov 12, 2020
Unsupervised Multimodal Image Registration with Adaptative Gradient GuidanceZhe Xu, Jiangpeng Yan, Jie Luo et al.
Multimodal image registration (MIR) is a fundamental procedure in many image-guided therapies. Recently, unsupervised learning-based methods have demonstrated promising performance over accuracy and efficiency in deformable image registration. However, the estimated deformation fields of the existing methods fully rely on the to-be-registered image pair. It is difficult for the networks to be aware of the mismatched boundaries, resulting in unsatisfactory organ boundary alignment. In this paper, we propose a novel multimodal registration framework, which leverages the deformation fields estimated from both: (i) the original to-be-registered image pair, (ii) their corresponding gradient intensity maps, and adaptively fuses them with the proposed gated fusion module. With the help of auxiliary gradient-space guidance, the network can concentrate more on the spatial relationship of the organ boundary. Experimental results on two clinically acquired CT-MRI datasets demonstrate the effectiveness of our proposed approach.
CVNov 12, 2020
Unimodal Cyclic Regularization for Training Multimodal Image Registration NetworksZhe Xu, Jiangpeng Yan, Jie Luo et al.
The loss function of an unsupervised multimodal image registration framework has two terms, i.e., a metric for similarity measure and regularization. In the deep learning era, researchers proposed many approaches to automatically learn the similarity metric, which has been shown effective in improving registration performance. However, for the regularization term, most existing multimodal registration approaches still use a hand-crafted formula to impose artificial properties on the estimated deformation field. In this work, we propose a unimodal cyclic regularization training pipeline, which learns task-specific prior knowledge from simpler unimodal registration, to constrain the deformation field of multimodal registration. In the experiment of abdominal CT-MR registration, the proposed method yields better results over conventional regularization methods, especially for severely deformed local regions.
IVSep 15, 2020
F3RNet: Full-Resolution Residual Registration Network for Deformable Image RegistrationZhe Xu, Jie Luo, Jiangpeng Yan et al.
Deformable image registration (DIR) is essential for many image-guided therapies. Recently, deep learning approaches have gained substantial popularity and success in DIR. Most deep learning approaches use the so-called mono-stream "high-to-low, low-to-high" network structure, and can achieve satisfactory overall registration results. However, accurate alignments for some severely deformed local regions, which are crucial for pinpointing surgical targets, are often overlooked. Consequently, these approaches are not sensitive to some hard-to-align regions, e.g., intra-patient registration of deformed liver lobes. In this paper, we propose a novel unsupervised registration network, namely the Full-Resolution Residual Registration Network (F3RNet), for deformable registration of severely deformed organs. The proposed method combines two parallel processing streams in a residual learning fashion. One stream takes advantage of the full-resolution information that facilitates accurate voxel-level registration. The other stream learns the deep multi-scale residual representations to obtain robust recognition. We also factorize the 3D convolution to reduce the training parameters and enhance network efficiency. We validate the proposed method on a clinically acquired intra-patient abdominal CT-MRI dataset and a public inspiratory and expiratory thorax CT dataset. Experiments on both multimodal and unimodal registration demonstrate promising results compared to state-of-the-art approaches.
IVJul 6, 2020
Adversarial Uni- and Multi-modal Stream Networks for Multimodal Image RegistrationZhe Xu, Jie Luo, Jiangpeng Yan et al.
Deformable image registration between Computed Tomography (CT) images and Magnetic Resonance (MR) imaging is essential for many image-guided therapies. In this paper, we propose a novel translation-based unsupervised deformable image registration method. Distinct from other translation-based methods that attempt to convert the multimodal problem (e.g., CT-to-MR) into a unimodal problem (e.g., MR-to-MR) via image-to-image translation, our method leverages the deformation fields estimated from both: (i) the translated MR image and (ii) the original CT image in a dual-stream fashion, and automatically learns how to fuse them to achieve better registration performance. The multimodal registration network can be effectively trained by computationally efficient similarity metrics without any ground-truth deformation. Our method has been evaluated on two clinical datasets and demonstrates promising results compared to state-of-the-art traditional and learning-based methods.