Abstract
Deep learning is gaining instant popularity in computer aided diagnosis of COVID-19. Due to the high sensitivity of Computed Tomography (CT) to this disease, CT-based COVID-19 detection with visual models is currently at the forefront of medical imaging research. Outcomes published in this direction
are frequently claiming highly accurate detection under deep transfer learning. This is leading medical technologists to believe that deep transfer learning is the mainstream solution for the problem. However, our critical analysis of the literature reveals an alarming performance disparity between different published
results. Hence, we conduct a systematic thorough investigation to analyze the effectiveness of deep transfer learning for COVID-19 detection with CT images. Exploring 14 state-of-the-art visual models with over 200 model training sessions, we conclusively establish that the published literature is frequently overestimating transfer learning performance for the problem, even in the
prestigious scientific sources. The roots of overestimation trace back to inappropriate data curation. We also provide case studies that consider more realistic scenarios, and establish transparent baselines for the problem. We hope that our reproducible investigation will help in curbing hype-driven claims for the critical problem of COVID-19 diagnosis, and pave the way for a more transparent performance evaluation of techniques for CT-based COVID-19 detection.
are frequently claiming highly accurate detection under deep transfer learning. This is leading medical technologists to believe that deep transfer learning is the mainstream solution for the problem. However, our critical analysis of the literature reveals an alarming performance disparity between different published
results. Hence, we conduct a systematic thorough investigation to analyze the effectiveness of deep transfer learning for COVID-19 detection with CT images. Exploring 14 state-of-the-art visual models with over 200 model training sessions, we conclusively establish that the published literature is frequently overestimating transfer learning performance for the problem, even in the
prestigious scientific sources. The roots of overestimation trace back to inappropriate data curation. We also provide case studies that consider more realistic scenarios, and establish transparent baselines for the problem. We hope that our reproducible investigation will help in curbing hype-driven claims for the critical problem of COVID-19 diagnosis, and pave the way for a more transparent performance evaluation of techniques for CT-based COVID-19 detection.
Original language | English |
---|---|
Title of host publication | International Conference on Digital Image Computing - Techniques and Applications (DICTA) |
Editors | Jun Zhou, Olivier Salvado, Ferdous Sohel, Paulo Vinicius K. Borges, Shilin Wang |
Publisher | IEEE, Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers |
ISBN (Electronic) | 9781665417099 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 2021 |
Event | International Conference on Digital Image Computing: Techniques and Applications - Gold Coast/Online, Surfers Paradise, Australia Duration: 29 Nov 2021 → 1 Dec 2021 |
Conference
Conference | International Conference on Digital Image Computing: Techniques and Applications |
---|---|
Abbreviated title | DICTA 2021 |
Country/Territory | Australia |
City | Surfers Paradise |
Period | 29/11/21 → 1/12/21 |