Abstract

Deep learning has substantially improved the state-of-the-art in object detection and image classification. Deep learning usually requires large-scale labelled datasets to train the models; however, due to the restrictions in medical data sharing and accessibility and the expensive labelling cost, the application of deep learning in medical image classification has been dramatically hindered. In this study, we propose a novel method that leverages semi-supervised adversarial learning and pseudo-labelling to incorporate the unlabelled images in model learning. We validate the proposed method on two public databases, including ChestX-ray14 for lung disease classification and BreakHis for breast cancer histopathological image diagnosis. The results show that our method achieved highly effective performance with an accuracy of 93.15% while using only 30% of the labelled samples, which is comparable to the state-of-the-art accuracy for chest X-ray classification; it also outperformed the current methods in multi-class breast cancer histopathological image classification with a high accuracy of 96.87%.

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