Literature DB >> 33119525

Unifying Relational Sentence Generation and Retrieval for Medical Image Report Composition.

Fuyu Wang, Xiaodan Liang, Lin Xu, Liang Lin.   

Abstract

Beyond generating long and topic-coherent paragraphs in traditional captioning tasks, the medical image report composition task poses more task-oriented challenges by requiring both the highly accurate medical term diagnosis and multiple heterogeneous forms of information, including impression and findings. Current methods often generate the most common sentences due to dataset bias for the individual case, regardless of whether the sentences properly capture key entities and relationships. Such limitations severely hinder their applicability and generalization capability in medical report composition, where the most critical sentences lie in the descriptions of abnormal diseases that are relatively rare. Moreover, some medical terms appearing in one report are often entangled with each other and co-occurred, for example, symptoms associated with a specific disease. To enforce the semantic consistency of medical terms to be incorporated into the final reports and encourage the sentence generation for rare abnormal descriptions, we propose a novel framework that unifies template retrieval and sentence generation to handle both common and rare abnormality while ensuring the semantic coherency among the detected medical terms. Specifically, our approach exploits hybrid-knowledge co-reasoning: 1) explicit relationships among all abnormal medical terms to induce the visual attention learning and topic representation encoding for better topic-oriented symptoms descriptions and 2) adaptive generation mode that changes between the template retrieval and sentence generation according to a contextual topic encoder. The experimental results on two medical report benchmarks demonstrate the superiority of the proposed framework in terms of both human and metrics evaluation.

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Year:  2022        PMID: 33119525     DOI: 10.1109/TCYB.2020.3026098

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  IEEE Trans Cybern        ISSN: 2168-2267            Impact factor:   11.448


  1 in total

1.  Automatic captioning for medical imaging (MIC): a rapid review of literature.

Authors:  Djamila-Romaissa Beddiar; Mourad Oussalah; Tapio Seppänen
Journal:  Artif Intell Rev       Date:  2022-09-17       Impact factor: 9.588

  1 in total

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