Xilai Wang

h-index1
2papers

2 Papers

CVAug 30, 2024
Language-guided Scale-aware MedSegmentor for Lesion Segmentation in Medical Imaging

Shuyi Ouyang, Jinyang Zhang, Xiangye Lin et al.

In clinical practice, segmenting specific lesions based on the needs of physicians can significantly enhance diagnostic accuracy and treatment efficiency. However, conventional lesion segmentation models lack the flexibility to distinguish lesions according to specific requirements. Given the practical advantages of using text as guidance, we propose a novel model, Language-guided Scale-aware MedSegmentor (LSMS), which segments target lesions in medical images based on given textual expressions. We define this as a new task termed Referring Lesion Segmentation (RLS). To address the lack of suitable benchmarks for RLS, we construct a vision-language medical dataset named Reference Hepatic Lesion Segmentation (RefHL-Seg). LSMS incorporates two key designs: (i) Scale-Aware Vision-Language attention module, which performs visual feature extraction and vision-language alignment in parallel. By leveraging diverse convolutional kernels, this module acquires rich visual representations and interacts closely with linguistic features, thereby enhancing the model's capacity for precise object localization. (ii) Full-Scale Decoder, which globally models multi-modal features across multiple scales and captures complementary information between them to accurately delineate lesion boundaries. Additionally, we design a specialized loss function comprising both segmentation loss and vision-language contrastive loss to better optimize cross-modal learning. We validate the performance of LSMS on RLS as well as on conventional lesion segmentation tasks across multiple datasets. Our LSMS consistently achieves superior performance with significantly lower computational cost. Code and datasets will be released.

CLDec 17, 2023
Explorers at #SMM4H 2023: Enhancing BERT for Health Applications through Knowledge and Model Fusion

Xutong Yue, Xilai Wang, Yuxin He et al.

An increasing number of individuals are willing to post states and opinions in social media, which has become a valuable data resource for studying human health. Furthermore, social media has been a crucial research point for healthcare now. This paper outlines the methods in our participation in the #SMM4H 2023 Shared Tasks, including data preprocessing, continual pre-training and fine-tuned optimization strategies. Especially for the Named Entity Recognition (NER) task, we utilize the model architecture named W2NER that effectively enhances the model generalization ability. Our method achieved first place in the Task 3. This paper has been peer-reviewed and accepted for presentation at the #SMM4H 2023 Workshop.