Zhongsen Li

IV
h-index7
5papers
67citations
Novelty55%
AI Score34

5 Papers

CVMar 17, 2023Code
Prototype Knowledge Distillation for Medical Segmentation with Missing Modality

Shuai Wang, Zipei Yan, Daoan Zhang et al.

Multi-modality medical imaging is crucial in clinical treatment as it can provide complementary information for medical image segmentation. However, collecting multi-modal data in clinical is difficult due to the limitation of the scan time and other clinical situations. As such, it is clinically meaningful to develop an image segmentation paradigm to handle this missing modality problem. In this paper, we propose a prototype knowledge distillation (ProtoKD) method to tackle the challenging problem, especially for the toughest scenario when only single modal data can be accessed. Specifically, our ProtoKD can not only distillate the pixel-wise knowledge of multi-modality data to single-modality data but also transfer intra-class and inter-class feature variations, such that the student model could learn more robust feature representation from the teacher model and inference with only one single modality data. Our method achieves state-of-the-art performance on BraTS benchmark. The code is available at \url{https://github.com/SakurajimaMaiii/ProtoKD}.

IVJul 5, 2023
Compound Attention and Neighbor Matching Network for Multi-contrast MRI Super-resolution

Wenxuan Chen, Sirui Wu, Shuai Wang et al.

Multi-contrast magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) reflects information about human tissue from different perspectives and has many clinical applications. By utilizing the complementary information among different modalities, multi-contrast super-resolution (SR) of MRI can achieve better results than single-image super-resolution. However, existing methods of multi-contrast MRI SR have the following shortcomings that may limit their performance: First, existing methods either simply concatenate the reference and degraded features or exploit global feature-matching between them, which are unsuitable for multi-contrast MRI SR. Second, although many recent methods employ transformers to capture long-range dependencies in the spatial dimension, they neglect that self-attention in the channel dimension is also important for low-level vision tasks. To address these shortcomings, we proposed a novel network architecture with compound-attention and neighbor matching (CANM-Net) for multi-contrast MRI SR: The compound self-attention mechanism effectively captures the dependencies in both spatial and channel dimension; the neighborhood-based feature-matching modules are exploited to match degraded features and adjacent reference features and then fuse them to obtain the high-quality images. We conduct experiments of SR tasks on the IXI, fastMRI, and real-world scanning datasets. The CANM-Net outperforms state-of-the-art approaches in both retrospective and prospective experiments. Moreover, the robustness study in our work shows that the CANM-Net still achieves good performance when the reference and degraded images are imperfectly registered, proving good potential in clinical applications.

IVFeb 28, 2025Code
Guiding Quantitative MRI Reconstruction with Phase-wise Uncertainty

Haozhong Sun, Zhongsen Li, Chenlin Du et al.

Quantitative magnetic resonance imaging (qMRI) requires multi-phase acqui-sition, often relying on reduced data sampling and reconstruction algorithms to accelerate scans, which inherently poses an ill-posed inverse problem. While many studies focus on measuring uncertainty during this process, few explore how to leverage it to enhance reconstruction performance. In this paper, we in-troduce PUQ, a novel approach that pioneers the use of uncertainty infor-mation for qMRI reconstruction. PUQ employs a two-stage reconstruction and parameter fitting framework, where phase-wise uncertainty is estimated during reconstruction and utilized in the fitting stage. This design allows uncertainty to reflect the reliability of different phases and guide information integration during parameter fitting. We evaluated PUQ on in vivo T1 and T2 mapping datasets from healthy subjects. Compared to existing qMRI reconstruction methods, PUQ achieved the state-of-the-art performance in parameter map-pings, demonstrating the effectiveness of uncertainty guidance. Our code is available at https://anonymous.4open.science/r/PUQ-75B2/.

IVMar 23, 2024
Graph Image Prior for Unsupervised Dynamic Cardiac Cine MRI Reconstruction

Zhongsen Li, Wenxuan Chen, Shuai Wang et al.

The inductive bias of the convolutional neural network (CNN) can be a strong prior for image restoration, which is known as the Deep Image Prior (DIP). Recently, DIP is utilized in unsupervised dynamic MRI reconstruction, which adopts a generative model from the latent space to the image space. However, existing methods usually use a pyramid-shaped CNN generator shared by all frames, embedding the temporal modeling within the latent space, which may hamper the model expression capability. In this work, we propose a novel scheme for dynamic MRI representation, named ``Graph Image Prior'' (GIP). GIP adopts a two-stage generative network in a new modeling methodology, which first employs independent CNNs to recover the image structure for each frame, and then exploits the spatio-temporal correlations within the feature space parameterized by a graph model. A graph convolutional network is utilized for feature fusion and dynamic image generation. In addition, we devise an ADMM algorithm to alternately optimize the images and the network parameters to improve the reconstruction performance. Experiments were conducted on cardiac cine MRI reconstruction, which demonstrate that GIP outperforms compressed sensing methods and other DIP-based unsupervised methods, significantly reducing the performance gap with state-of-the-art supervised algorithms. Moreover, GIP displays superior generalization ability when transferred to a different reconstruction setting, without the need for any additional data.

IVMay 13, 2023
Towards Generalizable Medical Image Segmentation with Pixel-wise Uncertainty Estimation

Shuai Wang, Zipei Yan, Daoan Zhang et al.

Deep neural networks (DNNs) achieve promising performance in visual recognition under the independent and identically distributed (IID) hypothesis. In contrast, the IID hypothesis is not universally guaranteed in numerous real-world applications, especially in medical image analysis. Medical image segmentation is typically formulated as a pixel-wise classification task in which each pixel is classified into a category. However, this formulation ignores the hard-to-classified pixels, e.g., some pixels near the boundary area, as they usually confuse DNNs. In this paper, we first explore that hard-to-classified pixels are associated with high uncertainty. Based on this, we propose a novel framework that utilizes uncertainty estimation to highlight hard-to-classified pixels for DNNs, thereby improving its generalization. We evaluate our method on two popular benchmarks: prostate and fundus datasets. The results of the experiment demonstrate that our method outperforms state-of-the-art methods.