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Deep learning models for COVID-19 chest x-ray classification: Preventing shortcut learning using feature disentanglement

In response to the COVID-19 global pandemic, recent research has proposed creating deep learning based models that use chest radiographs (CXRs) in a variety of clinical tasks to help manage the crisis. However, the size of existing datasets of CXRs from COVID-19+ patients are relatively small, and r...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Trivedi, Anusua, Robinson, Caleb, Blazes, Marian, Ortiz, Anthony, Desbiens, Jocelyn, Gupta, Sunil, Dodhia, Rahul, Bhatraju, Pavan K., Liles, W. Conrad, Kalpathy-Cramer, Jayashree, Lee, Aaron Y., Lavista Ferres, Juan M.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9536609/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36201483
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0274098
Descripción
Sumario:In response to the COVID-19 global pandemic, recent research has proposed creating deep learning based models that use chest radiographs (CXRs) in a variety of clinical tasks to help manage the crisis. However, the size of existing datasets of CXRs from COVID-19+ patients are relatively small, and researchers often pool CXR data from multiple sources, for example, using different x-ray machines in various patient populations under different clinical scenarios. Deep learning models trained on such datasets have been shown to overfit to erroneous features instead of learning pulmonary characteristics in a phenomenon known as shortcut learning. We propose adding feature disentanglement to the training process. This technique forces the models to identify pulmonary features from the images and penalizes them for learning features that can discriminate between the original datasets that the images come from. We find that models trained in this way indeed have better generalization performance on unseen data; in the best case we found that it improved AUC by 0.13 on held out data. We further find that this outperforms masking out non-lung parts of the CXRs and performing histogram equalization, both of which are recently proposed methods for removing biases in CXR datasets.