MDT: semi-supervised medical image segmentation with mixup-decoupling training

Phys Med Biol. 2024 Mar 13;69(6). doi: 10.1088/1361-6560/ad2715.

Abstract

Objective. In the field of medicine, semi-supervised segmentation algorithms hold crucial research significance while also facing substantial challenges, primarily due to the extreme scarcity of expert-level annotated medical image data. However, many existing semi-supervised methods still process labeled and unlabeled data in inconsistent ways, which can lead to knowledge learned from labeled data being discarded to some extent. This not only lacks a variety of perturbations to explore potential robust information in unlabeled data but also ignores the confirmation bias and class imbalance issues in pseudo-labeling methods.Approach. To solve these problems, this paper proposes a semi-supervised medical image segmentation method 'mixup-decoupling training (MDT)' that combines the idea of consistency and pseudo-labeling. Firstly, MDT introduces a new perturbation strategy 'mixup-decoupling' to fully regularize training data. It not only mixes labeled and unlabeled data at the data level but also performs decoupling operations between the output predictions of mixed target data and labeled data at the feature level to obtain strong version predictions of unlabeled data. Then it establishes a dual learning paradigm based on consistency and pseudo-labeling. Secondly, MDT employs a novel categorical entropy filtering approach to pick high-confidence pseudo-labels for unlabeled data, facilitating more refined supervision.Main results. This paper compares MDT with other advanced semi-supervised methods on 2D and 3D datasets separately. A large number of experimental results show that MDT achieves competitive segmentation performance and outperforms other state-of-the-art semi-supervised segmentation methods.Significance. This paper proposes a semi-supervised medical image segmentation method MDT, which greatly reduces the demand for manually labeled data and eases the difficulty of data annotation to a great extent. In addition, MDT not only outperforms many advanced semi-supervised image segmentation methods in quantitative and qualitative experimental results, but also provides a new and developable idea for semi-supervised learning and computer-aided diagnosis technology research.

Keywords: consistency; medical image segmentation; pseudo-labeling; semi-supervised segmentation.

MeSH terms

  • Algorithms*
  • Diagnosis, Computer-Assisted*
  • Entropy
  • Head
  • Image Processing, Computer-Assisted
  • Supervised Machine Learning