4.7 Article Proceedings Paper

Understanding the Relationship between Interactive Optimisation and Visual Analytics in the Context of Prostate Brachytherapy

Journal

Publisher

IEEE COMPUTER SOC
DOI: 10.1109/TVCG.2017.2744418

Keywords

Visual analytics; interactive optimisation; interactive systems and tools; prostate brachytherapy

Funding

  1. Australian Government through the Department of Communications
  2. Australian Research Council through the ICT Centre for Excellence Program

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The fields of operations research and computer science have long sought to find automatic solver techniques that can find high-quality solutions to difficult real-world optimisation problems. The traditional workflow is to exactly model the problem and then enter this model into a general-purpose black-box solver. In practice, however, many problems cannot be solved completely automatically, but require a human-in-the-loop to iteratively refine the model and give hints to the solver. In this paper, we explore the parallels between this interactive optimisation workflow and the visual analytics sense-making loop. We assert that interactive optimisation is essentially a visual analytics task and propose a problem-solving loop analogous to the sense-making loop. We explore these ideas through an in-depth analysis of a use-case in prostate brachytherapy, an application where interactive optimisation may be able to provide significant assistance to practitioners in creating prostate cancer treatment plans customised to each patient's tumour characteristics. However, current brachytherapy treatment planning is usually a careful, mostly manual process involving multiple professionals. We developed a prototype interactive optimisation tool for brachytherapy that goes beyond current practice in supporting focal therapy - targeting tumour cells directly rather than simply seeking coverage of the whole prostate gland. We conducted semi-structured interviews, in two stages, with seven radiation oncology professionals in order to establish whether they would prefer to use interactive optimisation for treatment planning and whether such a tool could improve their trust in the novel focal therapy approach and in machine generated solutions to the problem.

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