Abstract

Deep neural networks (DNNs) have emerged as a prominent model in medical image segmentation, achieving remarkable advancements in clinical practice. Despite the promising results reported in the literature, the effectiveness of DNNs necessitates substantial quantities of high-quality annotated training data. During experiments, we observe a significant decline in the performance of DNNs on the test set when there exists disruption in the labels of the training dataset, revealing inherent limitations in the robustness of DNNs. In this paper, we find that the neural memory ordinary differential equation (nmODE), a recently proposed model based on ordinary differential equations (ODEs), not only addresses the robustness limitation but also enhances performance when trained by the clean training dataset. However, it is acknowledged that the ODE-based model tends to be less computationally efficient compared to the conventional discrete models due to the multiple function evaluations required by the ODE solver. Recognizing the efficiency limitation of the ODE-based model, we propose a novel approach called the nmODE-based knowledge distillation (nmODE-KD). The proposed method aims to transfer knowledge from the continuous nmODE to a discrete layer, simultaneously enhancing the model's robustness and efficiency. The core concept of nmODE-KD revolves around enforcing the discrete layer to mimic the continuous nmODE by minimizing the KL divergence between them. Experimental results on 18 organs-at-risk segmentation tasks demonstrate that nmODE-KD exhibits improved robustness compared to ODE-based models while also mitigating the efficiency limitation.

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