Building generalizable AI models is one of the primary challenges in the healthcare domain. While radiologists rely on generalizable descriptive rules of abnormality, Neural Network (NN) models suffer even with a slight shift in input distribution (e.g., scanner type). Fine-tuning a model to transfer knowledge from one domain to another requires a significant amount of labeled data in the target domain. In this paper, we develop an interpretable model that can be efficiently fine-tuned to an unseen target domain with minimal computational cost. We assume the interpretable component of NN to be approximately domain-invariant. However, interpretable models typically underperform compared to their Blackbox (BB) variants. We start with a BB in the source domain and distill it into a \emph{mixture} of shallow interpretable models using human-understandable concepts. As each interpretable model covers a subset of data, a mixture of interpretable models achieves comparable performance as BB. Further, we use the pseudo-labeling technique from semi-supervised learning (SSL) to learn the concept classifier in the target domain, followed by fine-tuning the interpretable models in the target domain. We evaluate our model using a real-life large-scale chest-X-ray (CXR) classification dataset. The code is available at: \url{https://github.com/batmanlab/MICCAI-2023-Route-interpret-repeat-CXRs}.
Distilling BlackBox to Interpretable models for Efficient Transfer Learning
A mixture of interpretable models, distilled from a blackbox model and fine-tuned using pseudo-labeling, achieves comparable performance to the original blackbox model across different domains with minimal labeled data and computational cost.
- Year
- 2023
- Venue
- arXiv 2023
- Authors
- 3
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- Abstract onlyARXIV-DEFAULT
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- arxiv.org/abs/2305.17303v7ARXIV-DEFAULT
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