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/Min-Max Similarity: A Contrastive Semi-Supervised Deep Lea...

Min-Max Similarity: A Contrastive Semi-Supervised Deep Learning Network for Surgical Tools Segmentation

Ange Lou, Kareem Tawfik, Xing Yao, Ziteng Liu, Jack Noble

2022-03-29Semi-Supervised Semantic SegmentationSegmentationVideo SegmentationContrastive LearningVideo Semantic Segmentation
PaperPDFCode(official)

Abstract

A common problem with segmentation of medical images using neural networks is the difficulty to obtain a significant number of pixel-level annotated data for training. To address this issue, we proposed a semi-supervised segmentation network based on contrastive learning. In contrast to the previous state-of-the-art, we introduce Min-Max Similarity (MMS), a contrastive learning form of dual-view training by employing classifiers and projectors to build all-negative, and positive and negative feature pairs, respectively, to formulate the learning as solving a MMS problem. The all-negative pairs are used to supervise the networks learning from different views and to capture general features, and the consistency of unlabeled predictions is measured by pixel-wise contrastive loss between positive and negative pairs. To quantitatively and qualitatively evaluate our proposed method, we test it on four public endoscopy surgical tool segmentation datasets and one cochlear implant surgery dataset, which we manually annotated. Results indicate that our proposed method consistently outperforms state-of-the-art semi-supervised and fully supervised segmentation algorithms. And our semi-supervised segmentation algorithm can successfully recognize unknown surgical tools and provide good predictions. Also, our MMS approach could achieve inference speeds of about 40 frames per second (fps) and is suitable to deal with the real-time video segmentation.

Results

TaskDatasetMetricValueModel
Semantic Segmentation2017 Robotic Instrument Segmentation ChallengeDSC0.931MMS (20% Labeled)
Semantic SegmentationKvasir-InstrumentDice (Average)0.874MMS(20% labeled)
10-shot image generation2017 Robotic Instrument Segmentation ChallengeDSC0.931MMS (20% Labeled)
10-shot image generationKvasir-InstrumentDice (Average)0.874MMS(20% labeled)

Related Papers

SeC: Advancing Complex Video Object Segmentation via Progressive Concept Construction2025-07-21Deep Learning-Based Fetal Lung Segmentation from Diffusion-weighted MRI Images and Lung Maturity Evaluation for Fetal Growth Restriction2025-07-17DiffOSeg: Omni Medical Image Segmentation via Multi-Expert Collaboration Diffusion Model2025-07-17From Variability To Accuracy: Conditional Bernoulli Diffusion Models with Consensus-Driven Correction for Thin Structure Segmentation2025-07-17Unleashing Vision Foundation Models for Coronary Artery Segmentation: Parallel ViT-CNN Encoding and Variational Fusion2025-07-17SCORE: Scene Context Matters in Open-Vocabulary Remote Sensing Instance Segmentation2025-07-17Unified Medical Image Segmentation with State Space Modeling Snake2025-07-17A Privacy-Preserving Semantic-Segmentation Method Using Domain-Adaptation Technique2025-07-17