4.7 Article

Causality-Inspired Single-Source Domain Generalization for Medical Image Segmentation

Journal

IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON MEDICAL IMAGING
Volume 42, Issue 4, Pages 1095-1106

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TMI.2022.3224067

Keywords

Image segmentation; Training; Biomedical imaging; Correlation; Robustness; Data models; Training data; Domain generalization; image segmentation; causality; data augmentation

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In this work, the authors investigate the problem of training a deep network that is robust to unseen domains using only data from one source domain. They propose a causality-inspired data augmentation approach to expose the model to synthesized domain-shifted training examples. The approach is validated on three cross-domain segmentation scenarios and shows consistent performance improvements compared to competitive methods.
Deep learning models usually suffer from the domain shift issue, where models trained on one source domain do not generalize well to other unseen domains. In this work, we investigate the single-source domain generalization problem: training a deep network that is robust to unseen domains, under the condition that training data are only available from one source domain, which is common in medical imaging applications. We tackle this problem in the context of cross-domain medical image segmentation. In this scenario, domain shifts are mainly caused by different acquisition processes. We propose a simple causality-inspired data augmentation approach to expose a segmentation model to synthesized domain-shifted training examples. Specifically, 1) to make the deep model robust to discrepancies in image intensities and textures, we employ a family of randomly-weighted shallow networks. They augment training images using diverse appearance transformations. 2) Further we show that spurious correlations among objects in an image are detrimental to domain robustness. These correlations might be taken by the network as domain-specific clues for making predictions, and they may break on unseen domains. We remove these spurious correlations via causal intervention. This is achieved by resampling the appearances of potentially correlated objects independently. The proposed approach is validated on three cross-domain segmentation scenarios: cross-modality (CT-MRI) abdominal image segmentation, cross-sequence (bSSFP-LGE) cardiac MRI segmentation, and cross-site prostate MRI segmentation. The proposed approach yields consistent performance gains compared with competitive methods when tested on unseen domains.

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