Unsupervised domain adaptive myocardial infarction MRI classification diagnostics model based on target domain confused sample resampling

Comput Methods Programs Biomed. 2022 Nov:226:107055. doi: 10.1016/j.cmpb.2022.107055. Epub 2022 Aug 2.

Abstract

Objective: Inefficient circulatory system due to blockage of blood vessels leads to myocardial infarction and acute blockage. Myocardial infarction is frequently classified and diagnosed in medical treatment using MRI, yet this method is ineffective and prone to error. As a result, there are several implementation scenarios and clinical significance for employing deep learning to develop computer-aided algorithms to aid cardiologists in the routine examination of cardiac MRI.

Methods: This research uses two distinct domain classifiers to address this issue and achieve domain adaptation between the particular field and the specific part is a problem Current research on environment adaptive systems cannot effectively obtain and apply classification information for unsupervised scenes of target domain images. Insufficient information interchange between specific domains and specific domains is a problem. In this study, two different domain classifiers are used to solve this problem and achieve domain adaption. To effectively mine the source domain images for classification understanding, an unsupervised MRI classification technique for myocardial infarction called CardiacCN is proposed, which relies on adversarial instructions related to the interpolation of confusion specimens in the target domain for the conflict of confusion specimens for the target domain classification task.

Results: The experimental results demonstrate that the CardiacCN model in this study performs better on the six domain adaption tasks of the Sunnybrook Cardiac Dataset (SCD) dataset and increases the mean target area myocardial infarction MRI classification accuracy by approximately 1.2 percent. The classification performance of the CardiacCN model on the target domain does not vary noticeably when the temperature-controlled duration hyper-parameter rl falls in the region of 5-30. According to the experimental findings, the CardiacCN model is more resistant to the excitable rl. The CardiacCN model suggested in this research may successfully increase the accuracy of the source domain predictor for the target domain myocardial infarction clinical scanning classification in unsupervised learning, as shown by the visualization analysis infrastructure provision nurture. It is evident from the visualization assessment of embedded features that the CardiacCN model may significantly increase the source domain classifier's accuracy for the target domain's classification of myocardial infarction in clinical scans under unsupervised conditions.

Conclusion: To address misleading specimens with the inconsistent classification of target-domain myocardial infarction medical scans, this paper introduces the CardiacCN unsupervised domain adaptive MRI classification model, which relies on adversarial learning associated with resampling target-domain confusion samples. With this technique, implicit image classification information from the target domain is fully utilized, knowledge transfer from the target domain to the specific domain is encouraged, and the classification effect of the myocardial ischemia medical scan is improved in the target domain of the unsupervised scene.

Keywords: CardiacCN; Confrontational learning; Domain adaptation; Image classification; Myocardial infarction.

MeSH terms

  • Algorithms*
  • Humans
  • Magnetic Resonance Imaging
  • Myocardial Infarction* / diagnostic imaging