Generative Transfer Learning: Covid-19 Classification with a few Chest X-ray Images
Detection of diseases through medical imaging is preferred due to its non-invasive nature. Medical imaging supports multiple modalities of data that enable a thorough and quick look inside a human body. However, interpreting imaging data is often time-consuming and requires a great deal of human exp...
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Zusammenfassung: | Detection of diseases through medical imaging is preferred due to its
non-invasive nature. Medical imaging supports multiple modalities of data that
enable a thorough and quick look inside a human body. However, interpreting
imaging data is often time-consuming and requires a great deal of human
expertise. Deep learning models can expedite interpretation and alleviate the
work of human experts. However, these models are data-intensive and require
significant labeled images for training. During novel disease outbreaks such as
Covid-19, we often do not have the required labeled imaging data, especially at
the start of the epidemic. Deep Transfer Learning addresses this problem by
using a pretrained model in the public domain, e.g. any variant of either
VGGNet, ResNet, Inception, DenseNet, etc., as a feature learner to quickly
adapt the target task from fewer samples. Most pretrained models are deep with
complex architectures. They are trained with large multi-class datasets such as
ImageNet, with significant human efforts in architecture design and hyper
parameters tuning. We presented 1 a simpler generative source model, pretrained
on a single but related concept, can perform as effectively as existing larger
pretrained models. We demonstrate the usefulness of generative transfer
learning that requires less compute and training data, for Few Shot Learning
(FSL) with a Covid-19 binary classification use case. We compare classic deep
transfer learning with our approach and also report FSL results with three
settings of 84, 20, and 10 training samples. The model implementation of
generative FSL for Covid-19 classification is available publicly at
https://github.com/suvarnak/GenerativeFSLCovid.git. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2208.05305 |