Anatomical 3D Style Transfer Enabling Efficient Federated Learning with Extremely Low Communication Costs
In this study, we propose a novel federated learning (FL) approach that utilizes 3D style transfer for the multi-organ segmentation task. The multi-organ dataset, obtained by integrating multiple datasets, has high scalability and can improve generalization performance as the data volume increases....
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Zusammenfassung: | In this study, we propose a novel federated learning (FL) approach that
utilizes 3D style transfer for the multi-organ segmentation task. The
multi-organ dataset, obtained by integrating multiple datasets, has high
scalability and can improve generalization performance as the data volume
increases. However, the heterogeneity of data owing to different clients with
diverse imaging conditions and target organs can lead to severe overfitting of
local models. To align models that overfit to different local datasets,
existing methods require frequent communication with the central server,
resulting in higher communication costs and risk of privacy leakage. To achieve
an efficient and safe FL, we propose an Anatomical 3D Frequency Domain
Generalization (A3DFDG) method for FL. A3DFDG utilizes structural information
of human organs and clusters the 3D styles based on the location of organs. By
mixing styles based on these clusters, it preserves the anatomical information
and leads models to learn intra-organ diversity, while aligning the
optimization of each local model. Experiments indicate that our method can
maintain its accuracy even in cases where the communication cost is highly
limited (=1.25% of the original cost) while achieving a significant difference
compared to baselines, with a higher global dice similarity coefficient score
of 4.3%. Despite its simplicity and minimal computational overhead, these
results demonstrate that our method has high practicality in real-world
scenarios where low communication costs and a simple pipeline are required. The
code used in this project will be publicly available. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2410.20102 |