Abstract

The efficacy of supervised deep learning in medical image analyses, particularly in pathology, is hindered by the necessity for extensive manual annotations. Annotating images at the gigapixel level manually proves to be a highly labor-intensive and time-consuming task. Semi-supervised learning (SSL) has emerged as a promising approach that leverages unlabeled data to reduce labeling efforts. In this work, we introduce Semi-Path, a practical SSL framework enhanced with active learning (AL) for gigapixel pathology tasks. Unlike existing methods that treat SSL and AL as independent components where AL incurs significant computational complexity to SSL, we propose a deep fusion of SSL and AL into a unified framework. Our framework introduces Informative Active Annotation (IAA) that employs a SSL-AL iterative structure to effectively extract knowledge from unlabeled pathology data. This structure significantly minimizes labeling efforts and computational complexity. Then, we propose Adaptive Pseudo-Labeling (APL) to address heterogeneity in class distribution, and prediction difficulty that are often observed in real-world pathology tasks. We evaluate Semi-Path on pathology image classification and segmentation tasks over three datasets that include WSIs from breast, colorectal, and brain tissues. The experimental results demonstrate the consistent superiority of Semi-Path over state-of-the-art methods.

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