Nusrat Jahan

h-index15
2papers

2 Papers

CVDec 24, 2022
LMFLOSS: A Hybrid Loss For Imbalanced Medical Image Classification

Abu Adnan Sadi, Labib Chowdhury, Nusrat Jahan et al.

With advances in digital technology, the classification of medical images has become a crucial step for image-based clinical decision support systems. Automatic medical image classification represents a pivotal domain where the use of AI holds the potential to create a significant social impact. However, several challenges act as obstacles to the development of practical and effective solutions. One of these challenges is the prevalent class imbalance problem in most medical imaging datasets. As a result, existing AI techniques, particularly deep-learning-based methodologies, often underperform in such scenarios. In this study, we propose a novel framework called Large Margin aware Focal (LMF) loss to mitigate the class imbalance problem in medical imaging. The LMF loss represents a linear combination of two loss functions optimized by two hyperparameters. This framework harnesses the distinct characteristics of both loss functions by enforcing wider margins for minority classes while simultaneously emphasizing challenging samples found in the datasets. We perform rigorous experiments on three neural network architectures and with four medical imaging datasets. We provide empirical evidence that our proposed framework consistently outperforms other baseline methods, showing an improvement of 2%-9% in macro-f1 scores. Through class-wise analysis of f1 scores, we also demonstrate how the proposed framework can significantly improve performance for minority classes. The results of our experiments show that our proposed framework can perform consistently well across different architectures and datasets. Overall, our study demonstrates a simple and effective approach to addressing the class imbalance problem in medical imaging datasets. We hope our work will inspire new research toward a more generalized approach to medical image classification.

CVMay 19, 2025
Self-Supervised Learning for Image Segmentation: A Comprehensive Survey

Thangarajah Akilan, Nusrat Jahan, Wandong Zhang

Supervised learning demands large amounts of precisely annotated data to achieve promising results. Such data curation is labor-intensive and imposes significant overhead regarding time and costs. Self-supervised learning (SSL) partially overcomes these limitations by exploiting vast amounts of unlabeled data and creating surrogate (pretext or proxy) tasks to learn useful representations without manual labeling. As a result, SSL has become a powerful machine learning (ML) paradigm for solving several practical downstream computer vision problems, such as classification, detection, and segmentation. Image segmentation is the cornerstone of many high-level visual perception applications, including medical imaging, intelligent transportation, agriculture, and surveillance. Although there is substantial research potential for developing advanced algorithms for SSL-based semantic segmentation, a comprehensive study of existing methodologies is essential to trace advances and guide emerging researchers. This survey thoroughly investigates over 150 recent image segmentation articles, particularly focusing on SSL. It provides a practical categorization of pretext tasks, downstream tasks, and commonly used benchmark datasets for image segmentation research. It concludes with key observations distilled from a large body of literature and offers future directions to make this research field more accessible and comprehensible for readers.