Real-time Prediction of Segmentation Quality

June 16, 2018 ยท Declared Dead ยท ๐Ÿ› International Conference on Medical Image Computing and Computer-Assisted Intervention

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Authors Robert Robinson, Ozan Oktay, Wenjia Bai, Vanya Valindria, Mihir Sanghvi, Nay Aung, Josรฉ Paiva, Filip Zemrak, Kenneth Fung, Elena Lukaschuk, Aaron Lee, Valentina Carapella, Young Jin Kim, Bernhard Kainz, Stefan Piechnik, Stefan Neubauer, Steffen Petersen, Chris Page, Daniel Rueckert, Ben Glocker arXiv ID 1806.06244 Category cs.CV: Computer Vision Citations 62 Venue International Conference on Medical Image Computing and Computer-Assisted Intervention Last Checked 3 months ago
Abstract
Recent advances in deep learning based image segmentation methods have enabled real-time performance with human-level accuracy. However, occasionally even the best method fails due to low image quality, artifacts or unexpected behaviour of black box algorithms. Being able to predict segmentation quality in the absence of ground truth is of paramount importance in clinical practice, but also in large-scale studies to avoid the inclusion of invalid data in subsequent analysis. In this work, we propose two approaches of real-time automated quality control for cardiovascular MR segmentations using deep learning. First, we train a neural network on 12,880 samples to predict Dice Similarity Coefficients (DSC) on a per-case basis. We report a mean average error (MAE) of 0.03 on 1,610 test samples and 97% binary classification accuracy for separating low and high quality segmentations. Secondly, in the scenario where no manually annotated data is available, we train a network to predict DSC scores from estimated quality obtained via a reverse testing strategy. We report an MAE=0.14 and 91% binary classification accuracy for this case. Predictions are obtained in real-time which, when combined with real-time segmentation methods, enables instant feedback on whether an acquired scan is analysable while the patient is still in the scanner. This further enables new applications of optimising image acquisition towards best possible analysis results.
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