4.7 Article

Alleviating Class-Wise Gradient Imbalance for Pulmonary Airway Segmentation

Journal

IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON MEDICAL IMAGING
Volume 40, Issue 9, Pages 2452-2462

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TMI.2021.3078828

Keywords

Training; Image segmentation; Sun; Lung; Task analysis; Sensitivity; Medical diagnostic imaging; Airway segmentation; class imbalance; gradient erosion and dilation; group supervision; General Union loss

Funding

  1. National Key Research and Development Program of China [2019YFB1311503, 2017YFC0112700]
  2. Committee of Science and Technology, Shanghai, China [19510711200]
  3. Shanghai Sailing Program [20YF1420800]
  4. NSFC [61661010, 61977046, 62003208]
  5. Shanghai Jiao Tong University (SJTU) Trans-med Awards Research [20210101]
  6. Science and Technology Commission of Shanghai Municipality [20DZ2220400]

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This paper addresses the issues of class imbalance and gradient erosion encountered by CNN-based airway segmentation methods, proposing the use of group supervision and WingsNet technology, as well as designing a General Union loss function for improvement. Experiments demonstrate that the proposed method can predict airway structures more accurately.
Automated airway segmentation is a prerequisite for pre-operative diagnosis and intra-operative navigation for pulmonary intervention. Due to the small size and scattered spatial distribution of peripheral bronchi, this is hampered by a severe class imbalance between foreground and background regions, which makes it challenging for CNN-based methods to parse distal small airways. In this paper, we demonstrate that this problem is arisen by gradient erosion and dilation of the neighborhood voxels. During back-propagation, if the ratio of the foreground gradient to background gradient is small while the class imbalance is local, the foreground gradients can be eroded by their neighborhoods. This process cumulatively increases the noise information included in the gradient flow from top layers to the bottom ones, limiting the learning of small structures in CNNs. To alleviate this problem, we use group supervision and the corresponding WingsNet to provide complementary gradient flows to enhance the training of shallow layers. To further address the intra-class imbalance between large and small airways, we design a General Union loss function that obviates the impact of airway size by distance-based weights and adaptively tunes the gradient ratio based on the learning process. Extensive experiments on public datasets demonstrate that the proposed method can predict the airway structures with higher accuracy and better morphological completeness than the baselines.

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