Data-driven rank aggregation with application to grand challenges

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Abstract

The increased number of challenges for comparative evaluation of biomedical image analysis procedures clearly reflects a need for unbiased assessment of the state-of-the-art methodological advances. Moreover, the ultimate translation of novel image analysis procedures to the clinic requires rigorous validation and evaluation of alternative schemes, a task that is best outsourced to the international research community. We commonly see an increase of the number of metrics to be used in parallel, reflecting alternative ways to measure similarity. Since different measures come with different scales and distributions, these are often normalized or converted into an individual rank ordering, leaving the problem of combining the set of multiple rankings into a final score. Proposed solutions are averaging or accumulation of rankings, raising the question if different metrics are to be treated the same or if all metrics would be needed to assess closeness to truth. We address this issue with a data-driven method for automatic estimation of weights for a set of metrics based on unsupervised rank aggregation. Our method requires no normalization procedures and makes no assumptions about metric distributions. We explore the sensitivity of metrics to small changes in input data with an iterative perturbation scheme, to prioritize the contribution of the most robust metrics in the overall ranking. We show on real anatomical data that our weighting scheme can dramatically change the ranking.

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APA

Fishbaugh, J., Prastawa, M., Wang, B., Reynolds, P., Aylward, S., & Gerig, G. (2017). Data-driven rank aggregation with application to grand challenges. In Lecture Notes in Computer Science (including subseries Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence and Lecture Notes in Bioinformatics) (Vol. 10434 LNCS, pp. 754–762). Springer Verlag. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-66185-8_85

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