CVLGIVJun 24, 2021

Where is the disease? Semi-supervised pseudo-normality synthesis from an abnormal image

arXiv:2106.15345v13 citations
AI Analysis

This work addresses the need for expensive lesion segmentation data in medical image synthesis, offering a semi-supervised approach that reduces data requirements while maintaining quality.

The paper tackles the problem of generating pseudo-normal images from abnormal ones without requiring extensive lesion segmentation data, achieving up to 6% improvement in data augmentation and 3% in image quality compared to state-of-the-art models.

Pseudo-normality synthesis, which computationally generates a pseudo-normal image from an abnormal one (e.g., with lesions), is critical in many perspectives, from lesion detection, data augmentation to clinical surgery suggestion. However, it is challenging to generate high-quality pseudo-normal images in the absence of the lesion information. Thus, expensive lesion segmentation data have been introduced to provide lesion information for the generative models and improve the quality of the synthetic images. In this paper, we aim to alleviate the need of a large amount of lesion segmentation data when generating pseudo-normal images. We propose a Semi-supervised Medical Image generative LEarning network (SMILE) which not only utilizes limited medical images with segmentation masks, but also leverages massive medical images without segmentation masks to generate realistic pseudo-normal images. Extensive experiments show that our model outperforms the best state-of-the-art model by up to 6% for data augmentation task and 3% in generating high-quality images. Moreover, the proposed semi-supervised learning achieves comparable medical image synthesis quality with supervised learning model, using only 50 of segmentation data.

Foundations

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