Abstract

Currently, color medical image segmentation methods commonly extract color and texture features mixed together by default, however, the distribution of color information and texture information is different: color information is represented differently in different color channels of a color image, while the distribution of texture information remains the same. Such a simple and brute-force feature extraction pattern will inevitably result in a partial bias in the model's semantics understanding. In this paper, we decouple the representation learning for color-texture information, and propose a novel network for color medical image segmentation, named CTNet. Specifically, CTNet introduces the Quaternion CNN (QCNN) module to capture the correlation among different color channels of color medical images to generate color features, and uses a designed local-global texture feature integrator (LoG) to mine the textural features from local to global. Moreover, a multi-stage features interaction strategy is proposed to minimize the semantic understanding gap of color and texture features in CTNet, so that they can be subsequently fused to generate a unified and robust feature representation. Comparative experiments on four different color medical image segmentation benchmark datasets show that CTNet strikes an optimal trade-off between segmentation accuracy and computational overhead when compared to current state-of-the-art methods. We also conduct extensive ablation experiments to verify the effectiveness of the proposed components. Our code will be available at https://github.com/Notmezhan/CTNet.

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