T-Net: Learning Feature Representation with Task-specific Supervision for Biomedical Image Analysis

19 Feb 2020  ·  Weinan Song, Yuan Liang, Jiawei Yang, Kun Wang, Lei He ·

The encoder-decoder network is widely used to learn deep feature representations from pixel-wise annotations in biomedical image analysis. Under this structure, the performance profoundly relies on the effectiveness of feature extraction achieved by the encoding network. However, few models have considered adapting the attention of the feature extractor even in different kinds of tasks. In this paper, we propose a novel training strategy by adapting the attention of the feature extractor according to different tasks for effective representation learning. Specifically, the framework, named T-Net, consists of an encoding network supervised by task-specific attention maps and a posterior network that takes in the learned features to predict the corresponding results. The attention map is obtained by the transformation from pixel-wise annotations according to the specific task, which is used as the supervision to regularize the feature extractor to focus on different locations of the recognition object. To show the effectiveness of our method, we evaluate T-Net on two different tasks, i.e. , segmentation and localization. Extensive results on three public datasets (BraTS-17, MoNuSeg and IDRiD) have indicated the effectiveness and efficiency of our proposed supervision method, especially over the conventional encoding-decoding network.

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