Unsupervised Pathology Detection: A Deep Dive Into the State of the Art
This work provides a benchmark for unsupervised pathology detection in medical images, which is incremental as it reassesses and updates the state-of-the-art without introducing a novel method.
The paper evaluated cutting-edge unsupervised anomaly detection methods on multiple medical datasets, showing that new feature-modeling methods outperform previous work and set new state-of-the-art results across various modalities.
Deep unsupervised approaches are gathering increased attention for applications such as pathology detection and segmentation in medical images since they promise to alleviate the need for large labeled datasets and are more generalizable than their supervised counterparts in detecting any kind of rare pathology. As the Unsupervised Anomaly Detection (UAD) literature continuously grows and new paradigms emerge, it is vital to continuously evaluate and benchmark new methods in a common framework, in order to reassess the state-of-the-art (SOTA) and identify promising research directions. To this end, we evaluate a diverse selection of cutting-edge UAD methods on multiple medical datasets, comparing them against the established SOTA in UAD for brain MRI. Our experiments demonstrate that newly developed feature-modeling methods from the industrial and medical literature achieve increased performance compared to previous work and set the new SOTA in a variety of modalities and datasets. Additionally, we show that such methods are capable of benefiting from recently developed self-supervised pre-training algorithms, further increasing their performance. Finally, we perform a series of experiments in order to gain further insights into some unique characteristics of selected models and datasets. Our code can be found under https://github.com/iolag/UPD_study/.