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G-MBRMD: Lightweight liver segmentation model based on guided teaching with multi-head boundary reconstruction mapping distillation.
Huang, Bo; Li, Hongxu; Fujita, Hamido; Sun, Xiaoning; Fang, Zhijun; Wang, Hailing; Su, Bo.
Affiliation
  • Huang B; School of Electronic and Electrical Engineering, Shanghai University of Engineering Science, Shanghai 201620, China.
  • Li H; School of Electronic and Electrical Engineering, Shanghai University of Engineering Science, Shanghai 201620, China.
  • Fujita H; Malaysia-Japan International Institute of Technology(MJIIT), Universiti Teknologi Malaysia, 54100 Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia; Andalusian Research Institute in Data Science and Computational Intelligence(DaSCI), University of Granada, Granada, Spain; Iwate Prefectural University, Iwate, Japan. Electronic
  • Sun X; School of Electronic and Electrical Engineering, Shanghai University of Engineering Science, Shanghai 201620, China.
  • Fang Z; Donghua University, Shanghai 201620, China.
  • Wang H; School of Electronic and Electrical Engineering, Shanghai University of Engineering Science, Shanghai 201620, China.
  • Su B; Central Laboratory, Shanghai Pulmonary Hospital, School of Medicine, Tongji University, China.
Comput Biol Med ; 178: 108733, 2024 Aug.
Article in En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38897144
ABSTRACT
BACKGROUND AND

OBJECTIVES:

Liver segmentation is pivotal for the quantitative analysis of liver cancer. Although current deep learning methods have garnered remarkable achievements for medical image segmentation, they come with high computational costs, significantly limiting their practical application in the medical field. Therefore, the development of an efficient and lightweight liver segmentation model becomes particularly important.

METHODS:

In our paper, we propose a real-time, lightweight liver segmentation model named G-MBRMD. Specifically, we employ a Transformer-based complex model as the teacher and a convolution-based lightweight model as the student. By introducing proposed multi-head mapping and boundary reconstruction strategies during the knowledge distillation process, Our method effectively guides the student model to gradually comprehend and master the global boundary processing capabilities of the complex teacher model, significantly enhancing the student model's segmentation performance without adding any computational complexity.

RESULTS:

On the LITS dataset, we conducted rigorous comparative and ablation experiments, four key metrics were used for evaluation, including model size, inference speed, Dice coefficient, and HD95. Compared to other methods, our proposed model achieved an average Dice coefficient of 90.14±16.78%, with only 0.6 MB memory and 0.095 s inference speed for a single image on a standard CPU. Importantly, this approach improved the average Dice coefficient of the baseline student model by 1.64% without increasing computational complexity.

CONCLUSION:

The results demonstrate that our method successfully realizes the unification of segmentation precision and lightness, and greatly enhances its potential for widespread application in practical settings.
Subject(s)
Key words

Full text: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Database: MEDLINE Main subject: Liver Limits: Humans Language: En Journal: Comput Biol Med Year: 2024 Document type: Article Affiliation country:

Full text: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Database: MEDLINE Main subject: Liver Limits: Humans Language: En Journal: Comput Biol Med Year: 2024 Document type: Article Affiliation country: