Abstract

Intense interest in applying convolutional neural networks (CNNs) in biomedical image analysis is wide spread, but its success is impeded by the lack of large annotated datasets in biomedical imaging. Annotating biomedical images is not only tedious and time consuming, but also demanding of costly, specialty-oriented knowledge and skills, which are not easily accessible. To dramatically reduce annotation cost, this paper presents a novel method called AIFT (active, incremental fine-tuning) to naturally integrate active learning and transfer learning into a single framework. AIFT starts directly with a pre-trained CNN to seek “worthy” samples from the unannotated for annotation, and the (fine-tuned) CNN is further fine-tuned continuously by incorporating newly annotated samples in each iteration to enhance the CNN’s performance incrementally. We have evaluated our method in three different biomedical imaging applications, demonstrating that the cost of annotation can be cut by at least half. This performance is attributed to the several advantages derived from the advanced active and incremental capability of our AIFT method.

Keywords

Computer scienceConvolutional neural networkAnnotationTransfer of learningArtificial intelligenceFine-tuningDeep learningMachine learningImage (mathematics)Automatic image annotationActive learning (machine learning)Pattern recognition (psychology)Image retrieval

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Publication Info

Year
2017
Type
article
Pages
4761-4772
Citations
412
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Closed

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Zongwei Zhou, J. Shin, Lei Zhang et al. (2017). Fine-Tuning Convolutional Neural Networks for Biomedical Image Analysis: Actively and Incrementally. , 4761-4772. https://doi.org/10.1109/cvpr.2017.506

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DOI
10.1109/cvpr.2017.506