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Old Age
FGML-DG: Feynman-Inspired Cognitive Science Paradigm for Cross-Domain Medical Image Segmentation
April 12, 2026 ยท Grace Period ยท ๐ Volume 413: ECAI 2025, (3912-3919)
Authors
Yucheng Song, Chenxi Li, Haokang Ding, Zhining Liao, Zhifang Liao
arXiv ID
2604.10524
Category
cs.CV: Computer Vision
Citations
0
Venue
Volume 413: ECAI 2025, (3912-3919)
Abstract
In medical image segmentation across multiple modalities (e.g., MRI, CT, etc.) and heterogeneous data sources (e.g., different hospitals and devices), Domain Generalization (DG) remains a critical challenge in AI-driven healthcare. This challenge primarily arises from domain shifts, imaging variations, and patient diversity, which often lead to degraded model performance in unseen domains. To address these limitations, we identify key issues in existing methods, including insufficient simplification of complex style features, inadequate reuse of domain knowledge, and a lack of feedback-driven optimization. To tackle these problems, inspired by Feynman's learning techniques in educational psychology, this paper introduces a cognitive science-inspired meta-learning paradigm for medical image domain generalization segmentation. We propose, for the first time, a cognitive-inspired Feynman-Guided Meta-Learning framework for medical image domain generalization segmentation (FGML-DG), which mimics human cognitive learning processes to enhance model learning and knowledge transfer. Specifically, we first leverage the 'concept understanding' principle from Feynman's learning method to simplify complex features across domains into style information statistics, achieving precise style feature alignment. Second, we design a meta-style memory and recall method (MetaStyle) to emulate the human memory system's utilization of past knowledge. Finally, we incorporate a Feedback-Driven Re-Training strategy (FDRT), which mimics Feynman's emphasis on targeted relearning, enabling the model to dynamically adjust learning focus based on prediction errors. Experimental results demonstrate that our method outperforms other existing domain generalization approaches on two challenging medical image domain generalization tasks.
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