Unsupervised Federated Domain Adaptation for Segmentation of MRI Images

TMLR Paper1997 Authors

02 Jan 2024 (modified: 22 Mar 2024)Rejected by TMLREveryoneRevisionsBibTeX
Abstract: Automatic semantic segmentation of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) images using deep neural networks greatly assists in evaluating and planning treatments for various clinical applications. However, training these models is conditioned on the availability of abundant annotated data to implement the end-to-end supervised learning procedure. Even if we annotate enough data, MRI images display considerable variability due to factors such as differences in patients, MRI scanners, and imaging protocols. This variability necessitates retraining neural networks for each specific application domain, which, in turn, requires manual annotation by expert radiologists for all new domains. To relax the need for persistent data annotation, we develop a method for unsupervised federated domain adaptation using multiple annotated source domains. Our approach enables the transfer of knowledge from several annotated source domains to adapt a model for effective use in an unannotated target domain. Initially, we ensure that the target domain data shares similar representations with each source domain in a latent embedding space, modeled as the output of a deep encoder, by minimizing the pair-wise distances of the distributions for the target domain and the source domains. We then employ an ensemble approach to leverage the knowledge obtained from all domains. We provide theoretical analysis and perform experiments on the MICCAI 2016 multi-site dataset to demonstrate our method is effective.
Submission Length: Regular submission (no more than 12 pages of main content)
Previous TMLR Submission Url: https://openreview.net/forum?id=Mvxiq7bz7b&referrer=%5BAuthor%20Console%5D(%2Fgroup%3Fid%3DTMLR%2FAuthors%23your-submissions)
Changes Since Last Submission: The template formatting issue was corrected.
Assigned Action Editor: ~Nicolas_THOME2
Submission Number: 1997
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