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Xeno-learning: knowledge transfer across species in deep learning-based spectral image analysis

15 October 2024
Jan Sellner
Alexander Studier-Fischer
Ahmad Bin Qasim
Shri Kiran Srinivasan
Nicholas Schreck
M. Tizabi
Manuel Wiesenfarth
A. Kopp-Schneider
Samuel Knödler
Caelan Max Haney
Gabriel Salg
Berkin Özdemir
Maximilian Dietrich
Maurice Stephan Michel
Felix Nickel
Kemal Kurniawan
Lena Maier-Hein
    MedIm
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Abstract

Novel optical imaging techniques, such as hyperspectral imaging (HSI) combined with machine learning-based (ML) analysis, have the potential to revolutionize clinical surgical imaging. However, these novel modalities face a shortage of large-scale, representative clinical data for training ML algorithms, while preclinical animal data is abundantly available through standardized experiments and allows for controlled induction of pathological tissue states, which is not ethically possible in patients. To leverage this situation, we propose a novel concept called "xeno-learning", a cross-species knowledge transfer paradigm inspired by xeno-transplantation, where organs from a donor species are transplanted into a recipient species. Using a total of 11,268 HSI images from humans as well as porcine and rat models, we show that although spectral signatures of organs differ across species, shared pathophysiological mechanisms manifest as comparable relative spectral changes across species. Such changes learnt in one species can thus be transferred to a new species via a novel "physiology-based data augmentation" method, enabling the large-scale secondary use of preclinical animal data for humans. The resulting ethical, monetary, and performance benefits of the proposed knowledge transfer paradigm promise a high impact of the methodology on future developments in the field.

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