Imbalanced training data introduce important challenge into medical image analysis where a majority of the data belongs to a normal class and only few samples belong to abnormal classes. We propose to mitigate the class imbalance problem by introducing two generative adversarial network (GAN) architectures for class minority oversampling. Here, we explore balancing data distribution 1) by generating new sample from unsupervised GAN or 2) synthesize missing image modalities from semi-supervised GAN. We evaluated the effect of the synthetic unsupervised and semi-supervised GAN methods by use of 1,500 MR images for brain disease diagnosis, where the classification performance of a residual network was compared between unbalanced datasets, classic data augmentation, and the proposed new GAN-based methods.The evaluation results showed that the synthesized minority samples generated by GAN improved classification accuracy up to 18% in term of Dice score.
Access to the requested content is limited to institutions that have purchased or subscribe to SPIE eBooks.
You are receiving this notice because your organization may not have SPIE eBooks access.*
*Shibboleth/Open Athens users─please
sign in
to access your institution's subscriptions.
To obtain this item, you may purchase the complete book in print or electronic format on
SPIE.org.
INSTITUTIONAL Select your institution to access the SPIE Digital Library.
PERSONAL Sign in with your SPIE account to access your personal subscriptions or to use specific features such as save to my library, sign up for alerts, save searches, etc.