CRJul 2, 2023
3D-IDS: Doubly Disentangled Dynamic Intrusion DetectionChenyang Qiu, Yingsheng Geng, Junrui Lu et al.
Network-based intrusion detection system (NIDS) monitors network traffic for malicious activities, forming the frontline defense against increasing attacks over information infrastructures. Although promising, our quantitative analysis shows that existing methods perform inconsistently in declaring various unknown attacks (e.g., 9% and 35% F1 respectively for two distinct unknown threats for an SVM-based method) or detecting diverse known attacks (e.g., 31% F1 for the Backdoor and 93% F1 for DDoS by a GCN-based state-of-the-art method), and reveals that the underlying cause is entangled distributions of flow features. This motivates us to propose 3D-IDS, a novel method that aims to tackle the above issues through two-step feature disentanglements and a dynamic graph diffusion scheme. Specifically, we first disentangle traffic features by a non-parameterized optimization based on mutual information, automatically differentiating tens and hundreds of complex features of various attacks. Such differentiated features will be fed into a memory model to generate representations, which are further disentangled to highlight the attack-specific features. Finally, we use a novel graph diffusion method that dynamically fuses the network topology for spatial-temporal aggregation in evolving data streams. By doing so, we can effectively identify various attacks in encrypted traffics, including unknown threats and known ones that are not easily detected. Experiments show the superiority of our 3D-IDS. We also demonstrate that our two-step feature disentanglements benefit the explainability of NIDS.
IVAug 16, 2023
CARE: A Large Scale CT Image Dataset and Clinical Applicable Benchmark Model for Rectal Cancer SegmentationHantao Zhang, Weidong Guo, Chenyang Qiu et al.
Rectal cancer segmentation of CT image plays a crucial role in timely clinical diagnosis, radiotherapy treatment, and follow-up. Although current segmentation methods have shown promise in delineating cancerous tissues, they still encounter challenges in achieving high segmentation precision. These obstacles arise from the intricate anatomical structures of the rectum and the difficulties in performing differential diagnosis of rectal cancer. Additionally, a major obstacle is the lack of a large-scale, finely annotated CT image dataset for rectal cancer segmentation. To address these issues, this work introduces a novel large scale rectal cancer CT image dataset CARE with pixel-level annotations for both normal and cancerous rectum, which serves as a valuable resource for algorithm research and clinical application development. Moreover, we propose a novel medical cancer lesion segmentation benchmark model named U-SAM. The model is specifically designed to tackle the challenges posed by the intricate anatomical structures of abdominal organs by incorporating prompt information. U-SAM contains three key components: promptable information (e.g., points) to aid in target area localization, a convolution module for capturing low-level lesion details, and skip-connections to preserve and recover spatial information during the encoding-decoding process. To evaluate the effectiveness of U-SAM, we systematically compare its performance with several popular segmentation methods on the CARE dataset. The generalization of the model is further verified on the WORD dataset. Extensive experiments demonstrate that the proposed U-SAM outperforms state-of-the-art methods on these two datasets. These experiments can serve as the baseline for future research and clinical application development.
SIMar 7, 2022
Fast Community Detection based on Graph Autoencoder ReconstructionChenyang Qiu, Zhaoci Huang, Wenzhe Xu et al.
With the rapid development of big data, how to efficiently and accurately discover tight community structures in large-scale networks for knowledge discovery has attracted more and more attention. In this paper, a community detection framework based on Graph AutoEncoder Reconstruction (noted as GAER) is proposed for the first time. GAER is a highly scalable framework which does not require any prior information. We decompose the graph autoencoder-based one-step encoding into the two-stage encoding framework to adapt to the real-world big data system by reducing complexity from the original O(N^2) to O(N). At the same time, based on the advantages of GAER support module plug-and-play configuration and incremental community detection, we further propose a peer awareness based module for real-time large graphs, which can realize the new nodes community detection at a faster speed, and accelerate model inference with the 6.15 times - 14.03 times speed. Finally, we apply the GAER on multiple real-world datasets, including some large-scale networks. The experimental result verified that GAER has achieved the superior performance on almost all networks.
CVApr 13, 2024Code
Meply: A Large-scale Dataset and Baseline Evaluations for Metastatic Perirectal Lymph Node Detection and SegmentationWeidong Guo, Hantao Zhang, Shouhong Wan et al.
Accurate segmentation of metastatic lymph nodes in rectal cancer is crucial for the staging and treatment of rectal cancer. However, existing segmentation approaches face challenges due to the absence of pixel-level annotated datasets tailored for lymph nodes around the rectum. Additionally, metastatic lymph nodes are characterized by their relatively small size, irregular shapes, and lower contrast compared to the background, further complicating the segmentation task. To address these challenges, we present the first large-scale perirectal metastatic lymph node CT image dataset called Meply, which encompasses pixel-level annotations of 269 patients diagnosed with rectal cancer. Furthermore, we introduce a novel lymph-node segmentation model named CoSAM. The CoSAM utilizes sequence-based detection to guide the segmentation of metastatic lymph nodes in rectal cancer, contributing to improved localization performance for the segmentation model. It comprises three key components: sequence-based detection module, segmentation module, and collaborative convergence unit. To evaluate the effectiveness of CoSAM, we systematically compare its performance with several popular segmentation methods using the Meply dataset. Our code and dataset will be publicly available at: https://github.com/kanydao/CoSAM.
SIJan 8, 2022Code
VGAER: Graph Neural Network Reconstruction based Community DetectionChenyang Qiu, Zhaoci Huang, Wenzhe Xu et al.
Community detection is a fundamental and important issue in network science, but there are only a few community detection algorithms based on graph neural networks, among which unsupervised algorithms are almost blank. By fusing the high-order modularity information with network features, this paper proposes a Variational Graph AutoEncoder Reconstruction based community detection VGAER for the first time, and gives its non-probabilistic version. They do not need any prior information. We have carefully designed corresponding input features, decoder, and downstream tasks based on the community detection task and these designs are concise, natural, and perform well (NMI values under our design are improved by 59.1% - 565.9%). Based on a series of experiments with wide range of datasets and advanced methods, VGAER has achieved superior performance and shows strong competitiveness and potential with a simpler design. Finally, we report the results of algorithm convergence analysis and t-SNE visualization, which clearly depicted the stable performance and powerful network modularity ability of VGAER. Our codes are available at https://github.com/qcydm/VGAER.
OCApr 14
A Momentum-based Stochastic Algorithm for Linearly Constrained Nonconvex OptimizationChenyang Qiu, Mihitha Maithripala, Zongli Lin
This paper studies a stochastic algorithm for linearly constrained nonconvex optimization, where the objective function is smooth but only unbiased stochastic gradients with bounded variance are available. We propose a momentum-based augmented Lagrangian method that employs a Polyak-type gradient estimator and requires only one stochastic gradient evaluation per iteration. Under the standard stochastic oracle model and the smoothness condition of the expected objective, we establish a convergence guarantee in terms of the first-order KKT residual of the original constrained problem. In particular, the proposed method computes an $ε$-stationary solution in expectation within $O(ε^{-4})$ stochastic gradient evaluations. Numerical experiments further show that the proposed method achieves competitive iteration complexity and improved wall-clock efficiency compared with representative recursive-momentum baselines.
LGDec 27, 2023
Refining Latent Homophilic Structures over Heterophilic Graphs for Robust Graph Convolution NetworksChenyang Qiu, Guoshun Nan, Tianyu Xiong et al.
Graph convolution networks (GCNs) are extensively utilized in various graph tasks to mine knowledge from spatial data. Our study marks the pioneering attempt to quantitatively investigate the GCN robustness over omnipresent heterophilic graphs for node classification. We uncover that the predominant vulnerability is caused by the structural out-of-distribution (OOD) issue. This finding motivates us to present a novel method that aims to harden GCNs by automatically learning Latent Homophilic Structures over heterophilic graphs. We term such a methodology as LHS. To elaborate, our initial step involves learning a latent structure by employing a novel self-expressive technique based on multi-node interactions. Subsequently, the structure is refined using a pairwisely constrained dual-view contrastive learning approach. We iteratively perform the above procedure, enabling a GCN model to aggregate information in a homophilic way on heterophilic graphs. Armed with such an adaptable structure, we can properly mitigate the structural OOD threats over heterophilic graphs. Experiments on various benchmarks show the effectiveness of the proposed LHS approach for robust GCNs.
IVMar 10, 2025
CAFusion: Controllable Anatomical Synthesis of Perirectal Lymph Nodes via SDF-guided DiffusionWeidong Guo, Hantao Zhang, Shouhong Wan et al.
Lesion synthesis methods have made significant progress in generating large-scale synthetic datasets. However, existing approaches predominantly focus on texture synthesis and often fail to accurately model masks for anatomically complex lesions. Additionally, these methods typically lack precise control over the synthesis process. For example, perirectal lymph nodes, which range in diameter from 1 mm to 10 mm, exhibit irregular and intricate contours that are challenging for current techniques to replicate faithfully. To address these limitations, we introduce CAFusion, a novel approach for synthesizing perirectal lymph nodes. By leveraging Signed Distance Functions (SDF), CAFusion generates highly realistic 3D anatomical structures. Furthermore, it offers flexible control over both anatomical and textural features by decoupling the generation of morphological attributes (such as shape, size, and position) from textural characteristics, including signal intensity. Experimental results demonstrate that our synthetic data substantially improve segmentation performance, achieving a 6.45% increase in the Dice coefficient. In the visual Turing test, experienced radiologists found it challenging to distinguish between synthetic and real lesions, highlighting the high degree of realism and anatomical accuracy achieved by our approach. These findings validate the effectiveness of our method in generating high-quality synthetic lesions for advancing medical image processing applications.
IVJun 14, 2024
A Deep Learning System for Rapid and Accurate Warning of Acute Aortic Syndrome on Non-contrast CT in ChinaYujian Hu, Yilang Xiang, Yan-Jie Zhou et al.
The accurate and timely diagnosis of acute aortic syndromes (AAS) in patients presenting with acute chest pain remains a clinical challenge. Aortic CT angiography (CTA) is the imaging protocol of choice in patients with suspected AAS. However, due to economic and workflow constraints in China, the majority of suspected patients initially undergo non-contrast CT as the initial imaging testing, and CTA is reserved for those at higher risk. In this work, we present an artificial intelligence-based warning system, iAorta, using non-contrast CT for AAS identification in China, which demonstrates remarkably high accuracy and provides clinicians with interpretable warnings. iAorta was evaluated through a comprehensive step-wise study. In the multi-center retrospective study (n = 20,750), iAorta achieved a mean area under the receiver operating curve (AUC) of 0.958 (95% CI 0.950-0.967). In the large-scale real-world study (n = 137,525), iAorta demonstrated consistently high performance across various non-contrast CT protocols, achieving a sensitivity of 0.913-0.942 and a specificity of 0.991-0.993. In the prospective comparative study (n = 13,846), iAorta demonstrated the capability to significantly shorten the time to correct diagnostic pathway. For the prospective pilot deployment that we conducted, iAorta correctly identified 21 out of 22 patients with AAS among 15,584 consecutive patients presenting with acute chest pain and under non-contrast CT protocol in the emergency department (ED) and enabled the average diagnostic time of these 21 AAS positive patients to be 102.1 (75-133) mins. Last, the iAorta can help avoid delayed or missed diagnosis of AAS in settings where non-contrast CT remains the unavoidable the initial or only imaging test in resource-constrained regions and in patients who cannot or did not receive intravenous contrast.