Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
Add like
Add dislike
Add to saved papers

Attentional adversarial training for few-shot medical image segmentation without annotations.

Medical image segmentation is a critical application that plays a significant role in clinical research. Despite the fact that many deep neural networks have achieved quite high accuracy in the field of medical image segmentation, there is still a scarcity of annotated labels, making it difficult to train a robust and generalized model. Few-shot learning has the potential to predict new classes that are unseen in training with a few annotations. In this study, a novel few-shot semantic segmentation framework named prototype-based generative adversarial network (PG-Net) is proposed for medical image segmentation without annotations. The proposed PG-Net consists of two subnetworks: the prototype-based segmentation network (P-Net) and the guided evaluation network (G-Net). On one hand, the P-Net as a generator focuses on extracting multi-scale features and local spatial information in order to produce refined predictions with discriminative context between foreground and background. On the other hand, the G-Net as a discriminator, which employs an attention mechanism, further distills the relation knowledge between support and query, and contributes to P-Net producing segmentation masks of query with more similar distributions as support. Hence, the PG-Net can enhance segmentation quality by an adversarial training strategy. Compared to the state-of-the-art (SOTA) few-shot segmentation methods, comparative experiments demonstrate that the proposed PG-Net provides noticeably more robust and prominent generalization ability on different medical image modality datasets, including an abdominal Computed Tomography (CT) dataset and an abdominal Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) dataset.

Full text links

We have located links that may give you full text access.
Can't access the paper?
Try logging in through your university/institutional subscription. For a smoother one-click institutional access experience, please use our mobile app.

Related Resources

For the best experience, use the Read mobile app

Mobile app image

Get seemless 1-tap access through your institution/university

For the best experience, use the Read mobile app

All material on this website is protected by copyright, Copyright © 1994-2024 by WebMD LLC.
This website also contains material copyrighted by 3rd parties.

By using this service, you agree to our terms of use and privacy policy.

Your Privacy Choices Toggle icon

You can now claim free CME credits for this literature searchClaim now

Get seemless 1-tap access through your institution/university

For the best experience, use the Read mobile app