4.6 Article

COVID Detection From Chest X-Ray Images Using Multi-Scale Attention

Journal

IEEE JOURNAL OF BIOMEDICAL AND HEALTH INFORMATICS
Volume 26, Issue 4, Pages 1496-1505

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/JBHI.2022.3151171

Keywords

COVID-19; Pulmonary diseases; Lung; X-ray imaging; Computed tomography; Decoding; Coronaviruses; 2019-nCoV; attention; COVID; chest X-ray; classification; explainability; pneumonia; SARS-CoV-2

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Deep learning methods have shown promise in automatic detection of Covid-19 from Chest X-Ray images, but incorporating explainability remains relatively unexplored. This study introduces a hierarchical classification approach using a novel attention architecture for separating normal, non-covid pneumonia, and covid cases with consistent explanations. Through cross-validation, the proposed method achieves competitive accuracy rates and provides clear explanations that align with expert annotations.
Deep learning based methods have shown great promise in achieving accurate automatic detection of Coronavirus Disease (covid) - 19 from Chest X-Ray (cxr) images.However, incorporating explainability in these solutions remains relatively less explored. We present a hierarchical classification approach for separating normal, non-covid pneumonia (ncp) and covid cases using cxr images. We demonstrate that the proposed method achieves clinically consistent explainations. We achieve this using a novel multi-scale attention architecture called Multi-scale Attention Residual Learning (marl) and a new loss function based on conicity for training the proposed architecture. The proposed classification strategy has two stages. The first stage uses a model derived from DenseNet to separate pneumonia cases from normal cases while the second stage uses the marl architecture to discriminate between covid and ncp cases. With a five-fold cross validation the proposed method achieves 93%, 96.28%, and 84.51% accuracy respectively over three large, public datasets for normal vs. ncp vs. covid classification. This is competitive to the state-of-the-art methods. We also provide explanations in the form of GradCAM attributions, which are well aligned with expert annotations. The attributions are also seen to clearly indicate that marl deems the peripheral regions of the lungs to be more important in the case of covid cases while central regions are seen as more important in ncp cases. This observation matches the criteria described by radiologists in clinical literature, thereby attesting to the utility of the derived explanations.

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