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1.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39374273

RESUMEN

Computer-aided ultrasound (US) imaging is an important prerequisite for early clinical diagnosis and treatment. Due to the harsh ultrasound (US) image quality and the blurry tumor area, recent memory-based video object segmentation models (VOS) achieve frame-level segmentation by performing intensive similarity matching among the past frames which could inevitably result in computational redundancy. Furthermore, the current attention mechanism utilized in recent models only allocates the same attention level among whole spatial-temporal memory features without making distinctions, which may result in accuracy degradation. In this paper, we first build a larger annotated benchmark dataset for breast lesion segmentation in ultrasound videos, then we propose a lightweight clip-level VOS framework for achieving higher segmentation accuracy while maintaining the speed. The Inner-Outer Clip Retformer is proposed to extract spatialtemporal tumor features in parallel. Specifically, the proposed Outer Clip Retformer extracts the tumor movement feature from past video clips to locate the current clip tumor position, while the Inner Clip Retformer detailedly extracts current tumor features that can produce more accurate segmentation results. Then a Clip Contrastive loss function is further proposed to align the extracted tumor features along both the spatial-temporal dimensions to improve the segmentation accuracy. In addition, the Global Retentive Memory is proposed to maintain the complementary tumor features with lower computing resources which can generate coherent temporal movement features. In this way, our model can significantly improve the spatial-temporal perception ability without increasing a large number of parameters, achieving more accurate segmentation results while maintaining a faster segmentation speed. Finally, we conduct extensive experiments to evaluate our proposed model on several video object segmentation datasets, the results show that our framework outperforms state-of-theart segmentation methods.

2.
Med Image Anal ; 97: 103253, 2024 Oct.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38968907

RESUMEN

Airway-related quantitative imaging biomarkers are crucial for examination, diagnosis, and prognosis in pulmonary diseases. However, the manual delineation of airway structures remains prohibitively time-consuming. While significant efforts have been made towards enhancing automatic airway modelling, current public-available datasets predominantly concentrate on lung diseases with moderate morphological variations. The intricate honeycombing patterns present in the lung tissues of fibrotic lung disease patients exacerbate the challenges, often leading to various prediction errors. To address this issue, the 'Airway-Informed Quantitative CT Imaging Biomarker for Fibrotic Lung Disease 2023' (AIIB23) competition was organized in conjunction with the official 2023 International Conference on Medical Image Computing and Computer Assisted Intervention (MICCAI). The airway structures were meticulously annotated by three experienced radiologists. Competitors were encouraged to develop automatic airway segmentation models with high robustness and generalization abilities, followed by exploring the most correlated QIB of mortality prediction. A training set of 120 high-resolution computerised tomography (HRCT) scans were publicly released with expert annotations and mortality status. The online validation set incorporated 52 HRCT scans from patients with fibrotic lung disease and the offline test set included 140 cases from fibrosis and COVID-19 patients. The results have shown that the capacity of extracting airway trees from patients with fibrotic lung disease could be enhanced by introducing voxel-wise weighted general union loss and continuity loss. In addition to the competitive image biomarkers for mortality prediction, a strong airway-derived biomarker (Hazard ratio>1.5, p < 0.0001) was revealed for survival prognostication compared with existing clinical measurements, clinician assessment and AI-based biomarkers.


Asunto(s)
Biomarcadores , Fibrosis Pulmonar , Tomografía Computarizada por Rayos X , Humanos , Tomografía Computarizada por Rayos X/métodos , Fibrosis Pulmonar/diagnóstico por imagen , Benchmarking , Interpretación de Imagen Radiográfica Asistida por Computador/métodos
3.
IEEE J Biomed Health Inform ; 28(4): 2115-2125, 2024 Apr.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38289846

RESUMEN

Masked image modeling (MIM) with transformer backbones has recently been exploited as a powerful self-supervised pre-training technique. The existing MIM methods adopt the strategy to mask random patches of the image and reconstruct the missing pixels, which only considers semantic information at a lower level, and causes a long pre-training time. This paper presents HybridMIM, a novel hybrid self-supervised learning method based on masked image modeling for 3D medical image segmentation. Specifically, we design a two-level masking hierarchy to specify which and how patches in sub-volumes are masked, effectively providing the constraints of higher level semantic information. Then we learn the semantic information of medical images at three levels, including: 1) partial region prediction to reconstruct key contents of the 3D image, which largely reduces the pre-training time burden (pixel-level); 2) patch-masking perception to learn the spatial relationship between the patches in each sub-volume (region-level); and 3) drop-out-based contrastive learning between samples within a mini-batch, which further improves the generalization ability of the framework (sample-level). The proposed framework is versatile to support both CNN and transformer as encoder backbones, and also enables to pre-train decoders for image segmentation. We conduct comprehensive experiments on five widely-used public medical image segmentation datasets, including BraTS2020, BTCV, MSD Liver, MSD Spleen, and BraTS2023. The experimental results show the clear superiority of HybridMIM against competing supervised methods, masked pre-training approaches, and other self-supervised methods, in terms of quantitative metrics, speed performance and qualitative observations.


Asunto(s)
Benchmarking , Automanejo , Humanos , Suministros de Energía Eléctrica , Hígado , Semántica , Procesamiento de Imagen Asistido por Computador
4.
IEEE J Biomed Health Inform ; 27(9): 4362-4372, 2023 09.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37155398

RESUMEN

Existing segmentation methods for brain MRI data usually leverage 3D CNNs on 3D volumes or employ 2D CNNs on 2D image slices. We discovered that while volume-based approaches well respect spatial relationships across slices, slice-based methods typically excel at capturing fine local features. Furthermore, there is a wealth of complementary information between their segmentation predictions. Inspired by this observation, we develop an Uncertainty-aware Multi-dimensional Mutual learning framework to learn different dimensional networks simultaneously, each of which provides useful soft labels as supervision to the others, thus effectively improving the generalization ability. Specifically, our framework builds upon a 2D-CNN, a 2.5D-CNN, and a 3D-CNN, while an uncertainty gating mechanism is leveraged to facilitate the selection of qualified soft labels, so as to ensure the reliability of shared information. The proposed method is a general framework and can be applied to varying backbones. The experimental results on three datasets demonstrate that our method can significantly enhance the performance of the backbone network by notable margins, achieving a Dice metric improvement of 2.8% on MeniSeg, 1.4% on IBSR, and 1.3% on BraTS2020.


Asunto(s)
Neoplasias Encefálicas , Redes Neurales de la Computación , Humanos , Procesamiento de Imagen Asistido por Computador/métodos , Reproducibilidad de los Resultados , Incertidumbre , Encéfalo
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