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Interleaved Text/Image Deep Mining on a Large-Scale Radiology Database for Automated Image Interpretation

Hoo-Chang Shin, Le Lu, Lauren Kim, Ari Seff, Jianhua Yao, Ronald M. Summers; 17(107):1−31, 2016.

Abstract

Despite tremendous progress in computer vision, there has not been an attempt to apply machine learning on very large-scale medical image databases. We present an interleaved text/image deep learning system to extract and mine the semantic interactions of radiology images and reports from a national research hospital's Picture Archiving and Communication System. With natural language processing, we mine a collection of $\sim$216K representative two-dimensional images selected by clinicians for diagnostic reference and match the images with their descriptions in an automated manner. We then employ a weakly supervised approach using all of our available data to build models for generating approximate interpretations of patient images. Finally, we demonstrate a more strictly supervised approach to detect the presence and absence of a number of frequent disease types, providing more specific interpretations of patient scans. A relatively small amount of data is used for this part, due to the challenge in gathering quality labels from large raw text data. Our work shows the feasibility of large-scale learning and prediction in electronic patient records available in most modern clinical institutions. It also demonstrates the trade-offs to consider in designing machine learning systems for analyzing large medical data.

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