Two-stage Cytopathological Image Synthesis for Augmenting Cervical Abnormality Screening
Automatic thin-prep cytologic test (TCT) screening can assist pathologists in finding cervical abnormality towards accurate and efficient cervical cancer diagnosis. Current automatic TCT screening systems mostly involve abnormal cervical cell detection, which generally requires large-scale and diver...
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Zusammenfassung: | Automatic thin-prep cytologic test (TCT) screening can assist pathologists in
finding cervical abnormality towards accurate and efficient cervical cancer
diagnosis. Current automatic TCT screening systems mostly involve abnormal
cervical cell detection, which generally requires large-scale and diverse
training data with high-quality annotations to achieve promising performance.
Pathological image synthesis is naturally raised to minimize the efforts in
data collection and annotation. However, it is challenging to generate
realistic large-size cytopathological images while simultaneously synthesizing
visually plausible appearances for small-size abnormal cervical cells. In this
paper, we propose a two-stage image synthesis framework to create synthetic
data for augmenting cervical abnormality screening. In the first Global Image
Generation stage, a Normal Image Generator is designed to generate
cytopathological images full of normal cervical cells. In the second Local Cell
Editing stage, normal cells are randomly selected from the generated images and
then are converted to different types of abnormal cells using the proposed
Abnormal Cell Synthesizer. Both Normal Image Generator and Abnormal Cell
Synthesizer are built upon Stable Diffusion, a pre-trained foundation model for
image synthesis, via parameter-efficient fine-tuning methods for customizing
cytopathological image contents and extending spatial layout controllability,
respectively. Our experiments demonstrate the synthetic image quality,
diversity, and controllability of the proposed synthesis framework, and
validate its data augmentation effectiveness in enhancing the performance of
abnormal cervical cell detection. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2402.14707 |