TasksSotADatasetsPapersMethodsSubmitAbout
Papers With Code 2

A community resource for machine learning research: papers, code, benchmarks, and state-of-the-art results.

Explore

Notable BenchmarksAll SotADatasetsPapersMethods

Community

Submit ResultsAbout

Data sourced from the PWC Archive (CC-BY-SA 4.0). Built by the community, for the community.

Papers/Evaluating the Clinical Realism of Synthetic Chest X-Rays ...

Evaluating the Clinical Realism of Synthetic Chest X-Rays Generated Using Progressively Growing GANs

Bradley Segal, David M. Rubin, Grace Rubin, Adam Pantanowitz

2020-10-07Synthetic Data GenerationData AugmentationMedical Image GenerationEthicsDiagnosticImage GenerationConditional Image Generation
PaperPDFCode(official)

Abstract

Chest x-rays are a vital tool in the workup of many patients. Similar to most medical imaging modalities, they are profoundly multi-modal and are capable of visualising a variety of combinations of conditions. There is an ever pressing need for greater quantities of labelled data to develop new diagnostic tools, however this is in direct opposition to concerns regarding patient confidentiality which constrains access through permission requests and ethics approvals. Previous work has sought to address these concerns by creating class-specific GANs that synthesise images to augment training data. These approaches cannot be scaled as they introduce computational trade offs between model size and class number which places fixed limits on the quality that such generates can achieve. We address this concern by introducing latent class optimisation which enables efficient, multi-modal sampling from a GAN and with which we synthesise a large archive of labelled generates. We apply a PGGAN to the task of unsupervised x-ray synthesis and have radiologists evaluate the clinical realism of the resultant samples. We provide an in depth review of the properties of varying pathologies seen on generates as well as an overview of the extent of disease diversity captured by the model. We validate the application of the Fr\'echet Inception Distance (FID) to measure the quality of x-ray generates and find that they are similar to other high resolution tasks. We quantify x-ray clinical realism by asking radiologists to distinguish between real and fake scans and find that generates are more likely to be classed as real than by chance, but there is still progress required to achieve true realism. We confirm these findings by evaluating synthetic classification model performance on real scans. We conclude by discussing the limitations of PGGAN generates and how to achieve controllable, realistic generates.

Results

TaskDatasetMetricValueModel
Medical Image GenerationChestXray14 1024x1024FID8.02Progressive Growing GAN
10-shot image generationChestXray14 1024x1024FID8.02Progressive Growing GAN

Related Papers

Smart fault detection in satellite electrical power system2025-07-18Overview of the TalentCLEF 2025: Skill and Job Title Intelligence for Human Capital Management2025-07-17Pixel Perfect MegaMed: A Megapixel-Scale Vision-Language Foundation Model for Generating High Resolution Medical Images2025-07-17Demographic-aware fine-grained classification of pediatric wrist fractures2025-07-17fastWDM3D: Fast and Accurate 3D Healthy Tissue Inpainting2025-07-17Synthesizing Reality: Leveraging the Generative AI-Powered Platform Midjourney for Construction Worker Detection2025-07-17FashionPose: Text to Pose to Relight Image Generation for Personalized Fashion Visualization2025-07-17A Distributed Generative AI Approach for Heterogeneous Multi-Domain Environments under Data Sharing constraints2025-07-17