TY - GEN
T1 - Local Spatiotemporal Representation Learning for Longitudinally-consistent Neuroimage Analysis
AU - Ren, Mengwei
AU - Dey, Neel
AU - Styner, Martin A.
AU - Botteron, Kelly N.
AU - Gerig, Guido
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 Neural information processing systems foundation. All rights reserved.
PY - 2022
Y1 - 2022
N2 - Recent self-supervised advances in medical computer vision exploit the global and local anatomical self-similarity for pretraining prior to downstream tasks such as segmentation. However, current methods assume i.i.d. image acquisition, which is invalid in clinical study designs where follow-up longitudinal scans track subject-specific temporal changes. Further, existing self-supervised methods for medically-relevant image-to-image architectures exploit only spatial or temporal self-similarity and do so via a loss applied only at a single image-scale, with naive multi-scale spatiotemporal extensions collapsing to degenerate solutions. To these ends, this paper makes two contributions: (1) It presents a local and multi-scale spatiotemporal representation learning method for image-to-image architectures trained on longitudinal images. It exploits the spatiotemporal self-similarity of learned multi-scale intra-subject image features for pretraining and develops several feature-wise regularizations that avoid degenerate representations; (2) During finetuning, it proposes a surprisingly simple self-supervised segmentation consistency regularization to exploit intra-subject correlation. Benchmarked across various segmentation tasks, the proposed framework outperforms both well-tuned randomly-initialized baselines and current self-supervised techniques designed for both i.i.d. and longitudinal datasets. These improvements are demonstrated across both longitudinal neurodegenerative adult MRI and developing infant brain MRI and yield both higher performance and longitudinal consistency.
AB - Recent self-supervised advances in medical computer vision exploit the global and local anatomical self-similarity for pretraining prior to downstream tasks such as segmentation. However, current methods assume i.i.d. image acquisition, which is invalid in clinical study designs where follow-up longitudinal scans track subject-specific temporal changes. Further, existing self-supervised methods for medically-relevant image-to-image architectures exploit only spatial or temporal self-similarity and do so via a loss applied only at a single image-scale, with naive multi-scale spatiotemporal extensions collapsing to degenerate solutions. To these ends, this paper makes two contributions: (1) It presents a local and multi-scale spatiotemporal representation learning method for image-to-image architectures trained on longitudinal images. It exploits the spatiotemporal self-similarity of learned multi-scale intra-subject image features for pretraining and develops several feature-wise regularizations that avoid degenerate representations; (2) During finetuning, it proposes a surprisingly simple self-supervised segmentation consistency regularization to exploit intra-subject correlation. Benchmarked across various segmentation tasks, the proposed framework outperforms both well-tuned randomly-initialized baselines and current self-supervised techniques designed for both i.i.d. and longitudinal datasets. These improvements are demonstrated across both longitudinal neurodegenerative adult MRI and developing infant brain MRI and yield both higher performance and longitudinal consistency.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85163147693&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=85163147693&partnerID=8YFLogxK
M3 - Conference contribution
AN - SCOPUS:85163147693
T3 - Advances in Neural Information Processing Systems
BT - Advances in Neural Information Processing Systems 35 - 36th Conference on Neural Information Processing Systems, NeurIPS 2022
A2 - Koyejo, S.
A2 - Mohamed, S.
A2 - Agarwal, A.
A2 - Belgrave, D.
A2 - Cho, K.
A2 - Oh, A.
PB - Neural information processing systems foundation
T2 - 36th Conference on Neural Information Processing Systems, NeurIPS 2022
Y2 - 28 November 2022 through 9 December 2022
ER -