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A Dempster-Shafer approach to trustworthy AI with application to fetal brain MRI segmentation

5 April 2022
Lucas Fidon
Michael Aertsen
Florian Kofler
A. Bink
A. David
Thomas Deprest
Doaa Emam
Frédéric Guffens
András Jakab
Gregor Kasprian
P. Kienast
Andrew Melbourne
Bjoern H. Menze
Nada Mufti
I. Pogledić
Daniela Prayer
Marlene Stuempflen
Esther Van Elslander
Sébastien Ourselin
Jan Deprest
Tom Kamiel Magda Vercauteren
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Abstract

Deep learning models for medical image segmentation can fail unexpectedly and spectacularly for pathological cases and images acquired at different centers than training images, with labeling errors that violate expert knowledge. Such errors undermine the trustworthiness of deep learning models for medical image segmentation. Mechanisms for detecting and correcting such failures are essential for safely translating this technology into clinics and are likely to be a requirement of future regulations on artificial intelligence (AI). In this work, we propose a trustworthy AI theoretical framework and a practical system that can augment any backbone AI system using a fallback method and a fail-safe mechanism based on Dempster-Shafer theory. Our approach relies on an actionable definition of trustworthy AI. Our method automatically discards the voxel-level labeling predicted by the backbone AI that violate expert knowledge and relies on a fallback for those voxels. We demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed trustworthy AI approach on the largest reported annotated dataset of fetal MRI consisting of 540 manually annotated fetal brain 3D T2w MRIs from 13 centers. Our trustworthy AI method improves the robustness of a state-of-the-art backbone AI for fetal brain MRIs acquired across various centers and for fetuses with various brain abnormalities.

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