CVAILGMMFeb 5, 2025

Long-tailed Medical Diagnosis with Relation-aware Representation Learning and Iterative Classifier Calibration

arXiv:2502.03238v24 citationsh-index: 3Has CodeComput. Biol. Medicine
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses the challenge of diagnosing rare diseases in medical imaging, which is an incremental improvement over existing long-tailed classification methods.

The paper tackles the problem of biased performance in computer-aided medical diagnosis due to imbalanced disease categories, proposing a framework that improves classification accuracy on long-tailed datasets, achieving state-of-the-art results across three public medical datasets.

Recently computer-aided diagnosis has demonstrated promising performance, effectively alleviating the workload of clinicians. However, the inherent sample imbalance among different diseases leads algorithms biased to the majority categories, leading to poor performance for rare categories. Existing works formulated this challenge as a long-tailed problem and attempted to tackle it by decoupling the feature representation and classification. Yet, due to the imbalanced distribution and limited samples from tail classes, these works are prone to biased representation learning and insufficient classifier calibration. To tackle these problems, we propose a new Long-tailed Medical Diagnosis (LMD) framework for balanced medical image classification on long-tailed datasets. In the initial stage, we develop a Relation-aware Representation Learning (RRL) scheme to boost the representation ability by encouraging the encoder to capture intrinsic semantic features through different data augmentations. In the subsequent stage, we propose an Iterative Classifier Calibration (ICC) scheme to calibrate the classifier iteratively. This is achieved by generating a large number of balanced virtual features and fine-tuning the encoder using an Expectation-Maximization manner. The proposed ICC compensates for minority categories to facilitate unbiased classifier optimization while maintaining the diagnostic knowledge in majority classes. Comprehensive experiments on three public long-tailed medical datasets demonstrate that our LMD framework significantly surpasses state-of-the-art approaches. The source code can be accessed at https://github.com/peterlipan/LMD.

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