Learning to diagnose from scratch by exploiting dependencies among labels

October 28, 2017 Β· Declared Dead Β· πŸ› arXiv.org

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Authors Li Yao, Eric Poblenz, Dmitry Dagunts, Ben Covington, Devon Bernard, Kevin Lyman arXiv ID 1710.10501 Category cs.CV: Computer Vision Citations 359 Venue arXiv.org Last Checked 3 months ago
Abstract
The field of medical diagnostics contains a wealth of challenges which closely resemble classical machine learning problems; practical constraints, however, complicate the translation of these endpoints naively into classical architectures. Many tasks in radiology, for example, are largely problems of multi-label classification wherein medical images are interpreted to indicate multiple present or suspected pathologies. Clinical settings drive the necessity for high accuracy simultaneously across a multitude of pathological outcomes and greatly limit the utility of tools which consider only a subset. This issue is exacerbated by a general scarcity of training data and maximizes the need to extract clinically relevant features from available samples -- ideally without the use of pre-trained models which may carry forward undesirable biases from tangentially related tasks. We present and evaluate a partial solution to these constraints in using LSTMs to leverage interdependencies among target labels in predicting 14 pathologic patterns from chest x-rays and establish state of the art results on the largest publicly available chest x-ray dataset from the NIH without pre-training. Furthermore, we propose and discuss alternative evaluation metrics and their relevance in clinical practice.
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