JOURNAL ARTICLE

Unsupervised Domain Adaptation by Cross-Prototype Contrastive Learning for Medical Image Segmentation

Abstract

Unsupervised Domain Adaptation (UDA), which aligns the labeled source distribution to the unlabeled target distribution, has shown remarkable achievement in the medical image segmentation task. Previous UDA methods unilaterally consider the global distribution alignment through explicit category-based loss while good separation and discrimination of class are insufficiently explored, resulting in the sub-aligned distribution across domains. In this paper, we propose cross-prototype contrastive learning method (CPCL) for UDA segmentation through class centroid alignment. Specifically, to reduce the intra-class distance and increase the inter-class distance, we first introduce prototype-feature contrastive learning to align the pixel-level features and the same-class global prototype across domains. Secondly, we further present prototype-prototype contrastive learning to align the same class prototypes between the source domain and target domain for compact category centroid and better global domain distribution alignment. Extensive experiments on two public cardiac datasets demonstrate that the proposed CPCL achieves superior domain adaptation performance as compared with the state-of-the-art.

Keywords:
Computer science Segmentation Artificial intelligence Centroid Domain (mathematical analysis) Pattern recognition (psychology) Domain adaptation Feature (linguistics) Adaptation (eye) Class (philosophy) Image segmentation Computer vision Mathematics

Metrics

5
Cited By
1.28
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
30
Refs
0.81
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

Domain Adaptation and Few-Shot Learning
Physical Sciences →  Computer Science →  Artificial Intelligence
COVID-19 diagnosis using AI
Health Sciences →  Medicine →  Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and Imaging
Fetal and Pediatric Neurological Disorders
Health Sciences →  Medicine →  Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health
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