Cross-domain and Cross-dimension Learning for Image-to-Graph Transformers
This addresses data scarcity in specialized domains like medical imaging by enabling transfer from labeled 2D data to different domains or dimensions.
The paper tackles the challenge of training image-to-graph transformers with limited domain-specific data by introducing methods for cross-domain and cross-dimension learning, demonstrating consistent performance improvements over standard transfer learning on benchmarks like retinal and whole-brain vessel graph extraction.
Direct image-to-graph transformation is a challenging task that involves solving object detection and relationship prediction in a single model. Due to this task's complexity, large training datasets are rare in many domains, making the training of deep-learning methods challenging. This data sparsity necessitates transfer learning strategies akin to the state-of-the-art in general computer vision. In this work, we introduce a set of methods enabling cross-domain and cross-dimension learning for image-to-graph transformers. We propose (1) a regularized edge sampling loss to effectively learn object relations in multiple domains with different numbers of edges, (2) a domain adaptation framework for image-to-graph transformers aligning image- and graph-level features from different domains, and (3) a projection function that allows using 2D data for training 3D transformers. We demonstrate our method's utility in cross-domain and cross-dimension experiments, where we utilize labeled data from 2D road networks for simultaneous learning in vastly different target domains. Our method consistently outperforms standard transfer learning and self-supervised pretraining on challenging benchmarks, such as retinal or whole-brain vessel graph extraction.