TUNA-Net: Task-Oriented UNsupervised Adversarial Network for Disease Recognition in Cross-domain Chest X-rays

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Abstract

In this work, we exploit the unsupervised domain adaptation problem for radiology image interpretation across domains. Specifically, we study how to adapt the disease recognition model from a labeled source domain to an unlabeled target domain, so as to reduce the effort of labeling each new dataset. To address the shortcoming of cross-domain, unpaired image-to-image translation methods which typically ignore class-specific semantics, we propose a task-driven, discriminatively trained, cycle-consistent generative adversarial network, termed TUNA-Net. It is able to preserve (1) low-level details, (2) high-level semantic information and (3) mid-level feature representation during the image-to-image translation process, to favor the target disease recognition task. The TUNA-Net framework is general and can be readily adapted to other learning tasks. We evaluate the proposed framework on two public chest X-ray datasets for pneumonia recognition. The TUNA-Net model can adapt labeled adult chest X-rays in the source domain such that they appear as if they were drawn from pediatric X-rays in the unlabeled target domain, while preserving the disease semantics. Extensive experiments show the superiority of the proposed method as compared to state-of-the-art unsupervised domain adaptation approaches. Notably, TUNA-Net achieves an AUC of 96.3% for pediatric pneumonia classification, which is very close to that of the supervised approach (98.1%), but without the need for labels on the target domain.

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Tang, Y., Tang, Y., Sandfort, V., Xiao, J., & Summers, R. M. (2019). TUNA-Net: Task-Oriented UNsupervised Adversarial Network for Disease Recognition in Cross-domain Chest X-rays. In Lecture Notes in Computer Science (including subseries Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence and Lecture Notes in Bioinformatics) (Vol. 11769 LNCS, pp. 431–440). Springer Science and Business Media Deutschland GmbH. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-32226-7_48

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