Frontiers in Neuroscience (May 2023)

Multiple sclerosis lesion segmentation: revisiting weighting mechanisms for federated learning

  • Dongnan Liu,
  • Dongnan Liu,
  • Mariano Cabezas,
  • Dongang Wang,
  • Dongang Wang,
  • Zihao Tang,
  • Zihao Tang,
  • Lei Bai,
  • Lei Bai,
  • Geng Zhan,
  • Geng Zhan,
  • Yuling Luo,
  • Yuling Luo,
  • Kain Kyle,
  • Kain Kyle,
  • Linda Ly,
  • Linda Ly,
  • James Yu,
  • James Yu,
  • Chun-Chien Shieh,
  • Chun-Chien Shieh,
  • Aria Nguyen,
  • Aria Nguyen,
  • Ettikan Kandasamy Karuppiah,
  • Ryan Sullivan,
  • Fernando Calamante,
  • Fernando Calamante,
  • Fernando Calamante,
  • Michael Barnett,
  • Michael Barnett,
  • Wanli Ouyang,
  • Weidong Cai,
  • Chenyu Wang,
  • Chenyu Wang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fnins.2023.1167612
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17

Abstract

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Background and introductionFederated learning (FL) has been widely employed for medical image analysis to facilitate multi-client collaborative learning without sharing raw data. Despite great success, FL's applications remain suboptimal in neuroimage analysis tasks such as lesion segmentation in multiple sclerosis (MS), due to variance in lesion characteristics imparted by different scanners and acquisition parameters.MethodsIn this work, we propose the first FL MS lesion segmentation framework via two effective re-weighting mechanisms. Specifically, a learnable weight is assigned to each local node during the aggregation process, based on its segmentation performance. In addition, the segmentation loss function in each client is also re-weighted according to the lesion volume for the data during training.ResultsThe proposed method has been validated on two FL MS segmentation scenarios using public and clinical datasets. Specifically, the case-wise and voxel-wise Dice score of the proposed method under the first public dataset is 65.20 and 74.30, respectively. On the second in-house dataset, the case-wise and voxel-wise Dice score is 53.66, and 62.31, respectively.Discussions and conclusionsThe Comparison experiments on two FL MS segmentation scenarios using public and clinical datasets have demonstrated the effectiveness of the proposed method by significantly outperforming other FL methods. Furthermore, the segmentation performance of FL incorporating our proposed aggregation mechanism can achieve comparable performance to that from centralized training with all the raw data.

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