A Progressive and Cross-Domain Deep Transfer Learning Framework for Wrist Fracture Detection
There has been an amplified focus on and benefit from the adoption of artificial intelligence (AI) in medical imaging applications. However, deep learning approaches involve training with massive amounts of annotated data in order to guarantee generalization and achieve high accuracies. Gathering an...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of Artificial Intelligence and Soft Computing Research 2022-04, Vol.12 (2), p.101-120 |
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Zusammenfassung: | There has been an amplified focus on and benefit from the adoption of artificial intelligence (AI) in medical imaging applications. However, deep learning approaches involve training with massive amounts of annotated data in order to guarantee generalization and achieve high accuracies. Gathering and annotating large sets of training images require expertise which is both expensive and time-consuming, especially in the medical field. Furthermore, in health care systems where mistakes can have catastrophic consequences, there is a general mistrust in the black-box aspect of AI models. In this work, we focus on improving the performance of medical imaging applications when limited data is available while focusing on the interpretability aspect of the proposed AI model. This is achieved by employing a novel transfer learning framework,
progressive transfer learning
, an automated annotation technique and a correlation analysis experiment on the learned representations.
Progressive transfer learning
helps jump-start the training of deep neural networks while improving the performance by gradually transferring knowledge from two source tasks into the target task. It is empirically tested on the wrist fracture detection application by first training a general radiology network
RadiNet
and using its weights to initialize
RadiNet
wrist
, that is trained on wrist images to detect fractures. Experiments show that
RadiNet
wrist
achieves an accuracy of 87% and an AUC ROC of 94% as opposed to 83% and 92% when it is pre-trained on the ImageNet dataset.
This improvement in performance is investigated within an
explainable AI
framework. More concretely, the learned deep representations of
RadiNet
wrist
are compared to those learned by the baseline model by conducting a correlation analysis experiment. The results show that, when transfer learning is
gradually
applied, some features are learned earlier in the network. Moreover, the deep layers in the
progressive transfer learning
framework are shown to encode features that are not encountered when traditional transfer learning techniques are applied.
In addition to the empirical results, a clinical study is conducted and the performance of
RadiNet
wrist
is compared to that of an expert radiologist. We found that
RadiNet
wrist
exhibited similar performance to that of radiologists with more than 20 years of experience.
This motivates follow-up research to train on more data to feasibly surpass radiologists’ performance, and |
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ISSN: | 2449-6499 2449-6499 |
DOI: | 10.2478/jaiscr-2022-0007 |