4.7 Article

Semi-supervised point consistency network for retinal artery/vein classification

Journal

COMPUTERS IN BIOLOGY AND MEDICINE
Volume 168, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.compbiomed.2023.107633

Keywords

Retinal images; Artery/vein classification; Semi-supervised learning; Point consistency; Deep learning

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This study proposes a novel semi-supervised point consistency network (SPC-Net) for retinal artery/vein (A/V) classification, addressing the challenges of specific tubular structures and limited well-labeled data in CNN-based approaches. The SPC-Net combines an AVC module and an MPC module, and introduces point set representations and consistency regularization to improve the accuracy of A/V classification.
Recent deep learning methods with convolutional neural networks (CNNs) have boosted advance prosperity of medical image analysis and expedited the automatic retinal artery/vein (A/V) classification. However, it is challenging for these CNN-based approaches in two aspects: (1) specific tubular structures and subtle variations in appearance, contrast, and geometry, which tend to be ignored in CNNs with network layer increasing; (2) limited well-labeled data for supervised segmentation of retinal vessels, which may hinder the effectiveness of deep learning methods. To address these issues, we propose a novel semi-supervised point consistency network (SPC-Net) for retinal A/V classification. SPC-Net consists of an A/V classification (AVC) module and a multi -class point consistency (MPC) module. The AVC module adopts an encoder-decoder segmentation network to generate the prediction probability map of A/V for supervised learning. The MPC module introduces point set representations to adaptively generate point set classification maps of the arteriovenous skeleton, which enjoys its prediction flexibility and consistency (i.e. point consistency) to effectively alleviate arteriovenous confusion. In addition, we propose a consistency regularization between the predicted A/V classification probability maps and point set representations maps for unlabeled data to explore the inherent segmentation perturbation of the point consistency, reducing the need for annotated data. We validate our method on two typical public datasets (DRIVE, HRF) and a private dataset (TR280) with different resolutions. Extensive qualitative and quantitative experimental results demonstrate the effectiveness of our proposed method for supervised and semi-supervised learning.

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