Brain MR Image Segmentation in Small Dataset with Adversarial Defense and Task Reorganization

Medical image segmentation is challenging especially in dealing with small dataset of 3D MR images. Encoding the variation of brain anatomical structures from individual subjects cannot be easily achieved, which is further challenged by only a limited number of well labeled subjects for training. In...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inMachine Learning in Medical Imaging pp. 1 - 8
Main Authors Ren, Xuhua, Zhang, Lichi, Wei, Dongming, Shen, Dinggang, Wang, Qian
Format Book Chapter
LanguageEnglish
Published Cham Springer International Publishing 10.10.2019
SeriesLecture Notes in Computer Science
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Summary:Medical image segmentation is challenging especially in dealing with small dataset of 3D MR images. Encoding the variation of brain anatomical structures from individual subjects cannot be easily achieved, which is further challenged by only a limited number of well labeled subjects for training. In this study, we aim to address the issue of brain MR image segmentation in small dataset. First, concerning the limited number of training images, we adopt adversarial defense to augment the training data and therefore increase the robustness of the network. Second, inspired by the prior knowledge of neural anatomies, we reorganize the segmentation tasks of different regions into several groups in a hierarchical way. Third, the task reorganization extends to the semantic level, as we incorporate an additional object-level classification task to contribute high-order visual features toward the pixel-level segmentation task. In experiments we validate our method by segmenting gray matter, white matter, and several major regions on a challenge dataset. The proposed method with only seven subjects for training can achieve 84.46% of Dice score in the onsite test set.
Bibliography:This work was supported by the National Key Research and Development Program of China (2018YFC0116400) and STCSM (19QC1400600, 17411953300).
ISBN:9783030326913
3030326918
ISSN:0302-9743
1611-3349
DOI:10.1007/978-3-030-32692-0_1