Individualized image region detection with total variation

Medical image data have emerged to be an indispensable component of modern medicine. Different from many general image problems that focus on outcome prediction or image recognition, medical image analysis pays more attention to model interpretation. For instance, given a list of medical images and...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inStatistical analysis and data mining Vol. 17; no. 3
Main Authors Wu, Sanyou, Wang, Fuying, Feng, Long
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Hoboken Wiley Subscription Services, Inc., A Wiley Company 01.06.2024
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Summary:Medical image data have emerged to be an indispensable component of modern medicine. Different from many general image problems that focus on outcome prediction or image recognition, medical image analysis pays more attention to model interpretation. For instance, given a list of medical images and corresponding labels of patients' health status, it is often of greater importance to identify the image regions that could differentiate the outcome status, compared to simply predicting labels of new images. Moreover, medical image data often demonstrate strong individual heterogeneity. In other words, the image regions associated with an outcome could be different across patients. As a consequence, the traditional one‐model‐fits‐all approach not only omits patient heterogeneity but also possibly leads to misleading or even wrong conclusions. In this article, we introduce a novel statistical framework to detect individualized regions that are associated with a binary outcome, that is, whether a patient has a certain disease or not. Moreover, we propose a total variation‐based penalization for individualized image region detection under a local label‐free scenario. Considering that local labeling is often difficult to obtain for medical image data, our approach may potentially have a wider range of applications in medical research. The effectiveness of our proposed approach is validated by two real histopathology databases: Colon Cancer and Camelyon16.
ISSN:1932-1864
1932-1872
DOI:10.1002/sam.11684