Pascal Bourdon

AI
h-index11
4papers
2citations
Novelty41%
AI Score32

4 Papers

AIJun 7, 2022
EiX-GNN : Concept-level eigencentrality explainer for graph neural networks

Adrien Raison, Pascal Bourdon, David Helbert

Nowadays, deep prediction models, especially graph neural networks, have a majorplace in critical applications. In such context, those models need to be highlyinterpretable or being explainable by humans, and at the societal scope, this understandingmay also be feasible for humans that do not have a strong prior knowledgein models and contexts that need to be explained. In the literature, explainingis a human knowledge transfer process regarding a phenomenon between an explainerand an explainee. We propose EiX-GNN (Eigencentrality eXplainer forGraph Neural Networks) a new powerful method for explaining graph neural networksthat encodes computationally this social explainer-to-explainee dependenceunderlying in the explanation process. To handle this dependency, we introducethe notion of explainee concept assimibility which allows explainer to adapt itsexplanation to explainee background or expectation. We lead a qualitative studyto illustrate our explainee concept assimibility notion on real-world data as wellas a qualitative study that compares, according to objective metrics established inthe literature, fairness and compactness of our method with respect to performingstate-of-the-art methods. It turns out that our method achieves strong results inboth aspects.

LGJul 26, 2022
ScoreCAM GNN: une explication optimale des réseaux profonds sur graphes

Adrien Raison, Pascal Bourdon, David Helbert

The explainability of deep networks is becoming a central issue in the deep learning community. It is the same for learning on graphs, a data structure present in many real world problems. In this paper, we propose a method that is more optimal, lighter, consistent and better exploits the topology of the evaluated graph than the state-of-the-art methods.

QMOct 14, 2025
Physics-Informed autoencoder for DSC-MRI Perfusion post-processing: application to glioma grading

Pierre Fayolle, Alexandre Bône, Noëlie Debs et al.

DSC-MRI perfusion is a medical imaging technique for diagnosing and prognosing brain tumors and strokes. Its analysis relies on mathematical deconvolution, but noise or motion artifacts in a clinical environment can disrupt this process, leading to incorrect estimate of perfusion parameters. Although deep learning approaches have shown promising results, their calibration typically rely on third-party deconvolution algorithms to generate reference outputs and are bound to reproduce their limitations. To adress this problem, we propose a physics-informed autoencoder that leverages an analytical model to decode the perfusion parameters and guide the learning of the encoding network. This autoencoder is trained in a self-supervised fashion without any third-party software and its performance is evaluated on a database with glioma patients. Our method shows reliable results for glioma grading in accordance with other well-known deconvolution algorithms despite a lower computation time. It also achieved competitive performance even in the presence of high noise which is critical in a medical environment.

IVOct 1, 2025
Improving Virtual Contrast Enhancement using Longitudinal Data

Pierre Fayolle, Alexandre Bône, Noëlie Debs et al.

Gadolinium-based contrast agents (GBCAs) are widely used in magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to enhance lesion detection and characterisation, particularly in the field of neuro-oncology. Nevertheless, concerns regarding gadolinium retention and accumulation in brain and body tissues, most notably for diseases that require close monitoring and frequent GBCA injection, have led to the need for strategies to reduce dosage. In this study, a deep learning framework is proposed for the virtual contrast enhancement of full-dose post-contrast T1-weighted MRI images from corresponding low-dose acquisitions. The contribution of the presented model is its utilisation of longitudinal information, which is achieved by incorporating a prior full-dose MRI examination from the same patient. A comparative evaluation against a non-longitudinal single session model demonstrated that the longitudinal approach significantly improves image quality across multiple reconstruction metrics. Furthermore, experiments with varying simulated contrast doses confirmed the robustness of the proposed method. These results emphasize the potential of integrating prior imaging history into deep learning-based virtual contrast enhancement pipelines to reduce GBCA usage without compromising diagnostic utility, thus paving the way for safer, more sustainable longitudinal monitoring in clinical MRI practice.