Angelo Lasala , Maria Chiara Fiorentino , Andrea Bandini , Sara Moccia
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Over the past decade, deep-learning (DL) algorithms have become a promising tool to aid clinicians in identifying fetal head standard planes (FHSPs) during ultrasound (US) examination. However, the adoption of these algorithms in clinical settings is still hindered by the lack of large annotated datasets. To overcome this barrier, we introduce FetalBrainAwareNet, an innovative framework designed to synthesize anatomically accurate images of FHSPs. FetalBrainAwareNet introduces a cutting-edge approach that utilizes class activation maps as a prior in its conditional adversarial training process. This approach fosters the presence of the specific anatomical landmarks in the synthesized images. Additionally, we investigate specialized regularization terms within the adversarial training loss function to control the morphology of the fetal skull and foster the differentiation between the standard planes, ensuring that the synthetic images faithfully represent real US scans in both structure and overall appearance. The versatility of our FetalBrainAwareNet framework is highlighted by its ability to generate high-quality images of three predominant FHSPs using a singular, integrated framework. Quantitative (Fréchet inception distance of 88.52) and qualitative (t-SNE) results suggest that our framework generates US images with greater variability compared to state-of-the-art methods. By using the synthetic images generated with our framework, we increase the accuracy of FHSP classifiers by 3.2% compared to training the same classifiers solely with real acquisitions. These achievements suggest that using our synthetic images to increase the training set could provide benefits to enhance the performance of DL algorithms for FHSPs classification that could be integrated in real clinical scenarios.
期刊介绍:
The purpose of the journal Computerized Medical Imaging and Graphics is to act as a source for the exchange of research results concerning algorithmic advances, development, and application of digital imaging in disease detection, diagnosis, intervention, prevention, precision medicine, and population health. Included in the journal will be articles on novel computerized imaging or visualization techniques, including artificial intelligence and machine learning, augmented reality for surgical planning and guidance, big biomedical data visualization, computer-aided diagnosis, computerized-robotic surgery, image-guided therapy, imaging scanning and reconstruction, mobile and tele-imaging, radiomics, and imaging integration and modeling with other information relevant to digital health. The types of biomedical imaging include: magnetic resonance, computed tomography, ultrasound, nuclear medicine, X-ray, microwave, optical and multi-photon microscopy, video and sensory imaging, and the convergence of biomedical images with other non-imaging datasets.