Publication | Closed Access
Federated Semi-Supervised Medical Image Segmentation via Prototype-Based Pseudo-Labeling and Contrastive Learning
48
Citations
39
References
2023
Year
Structured PredictionMedical Image SegmentationEngineeringMachine LearningDynamic Model AggregationDiagnostic ImagingPrototype-based Pseudo-labelingNatural Language ProcessingImage AnalysisData SciencePattern RecognitionSemi-supervised LearningContrastive LearningSupervised LearningSupervised TrainingHealth SciencesMedical ImagingFeature LearningKnowledge DiscoveryComputer ScienceMedical Image ComputingComputer VisionSemi-supervised SegmentationBiomedical ImagingComputer-aided DiagnosisMedical Image AnalysisImage Segmentation
Existing federated learning works mainly focus on the fully supervised training setting. In realistic scenarios, however, most clinical sites can only provide data without annotations due to the lack of resources or expertise. In this work, we are concerned with the practical yet challenging federated semi-supervised segmentation (FSSS), where labeled data are only with several clients and other clients can just provide unlabeled data. We take an early attempt to tackle this problem and propose a novel FSSS method with prototype-based pseudo-labeling and contrastive learning. First, we transmit a labeled-aggregated model, which is obtained based on prototype similarity, to each unlabeled client, to work together with the global model for debiased pseudo labels generation via a consistency- and entropy-aware selection strategy. Second, we transfer image-level prototypes from labeled datasets to unlabeled clients and conduct prototypical contrastive learning on unlabeled models to enhance their discriminative power. Finally, we perform the dynamic model aggregation with a designed consistency-aware aggregation strategy to dynamically adjust the aggregation weights of each local model. We evaluate our method on COVID-19 X-ray infected region segmentation, COVID-19 CT infected region segmentation and colorectal polyp segmentation, and experimental results consistently demonstrate the effectiveness of our proposed method. Codes areavailable at https://github.com/zhangbaiming/FedSemiSeg.
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