Are General-Purpose Vision Models All We Need for 2D Medical Image Segmentation? A Cross-Dataset Empirical Study

March 13, 2026 ยท Grace Period ยท ๐Ÿ› MICCAI 2026

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Authors Vanessa Borst, Samuel Kounev arXiv ID 2603.13044 Category cs.CV: Computer Vision Cross-listed cs.AI Citations 0 Venue MICCAI 2026
Abstract
Medical image segmentation (MIS) is a fundamental component of computer-assisted diagnosis and clinical decision support systems. Over the past decade, numerous architectures specifically tailored to medical imaging have emerged to address domain-specific challenges such as low contrast, small anatomical structures, and limited annotated data. In parallel, rapid progress in computer vision has produced highly capable general-purpose vision models (GP-VMs) originally designed for natural images. Despite their strong performance on standard vision benchmarks, their effectiveness for MIS remains insufficiently understood. In this work, we conduct a controlled empirical study to examine whether specialized medical segmentation architectures (SMAs) provide systematic advantages over modern GP-VMs for 2D MIS. We compare eleven SMAs and GP-VMs using a unified training and evaluation protocol. Experiments are performed across three heterogeneous datasets covering different imaging modalities, class structures, and data characteristics. Beyond segmentation accuracy, we analyze qualitative Grad-CAM visualizations to investigate explainability (XAI) behavior. Our results demonstrate that, for the analyzed datasets, GP-VMs out-perform the majority of specialized MIS models. Moreover, XAI analyses indicate that GP-VMs can capture clinically relevant structures without explicit domain-specific architectural design. These findings suggest that GP-VMs can represent a viable alternative to domain-specific methods, highlighting the importance of informed model selection for end-to-end MIS systems. All code and resources are available at GitHub.
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