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Autores principales: Pan, Jeanny, Seeböck, Philipp, Fürböck, Christoph, Pochepnia, Svitlana, Straub, Jennifer, Beer, Lucian, Prosch, Helmut, Langs, Georg
Formato: Preprint
Publicado: 2025
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Acceso en línea:https://arxiv.org/abs/2509.11436
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author Pan, Jeanny
Seeböck, Philipp
Fürböck, Christoph
Pochepnia, Svitlana
Straub, Jennifer
Beer, Lucian
Prosch, Helmut
Langs, Georg
author_facet Pan, Jeanny
Seeböck, Philipp
Fürböck, Christoph
Pochepnia, Svitlana
Straub, Jennifer
Beer, Lucian
Prosch, Helmut
Langs, Georg
contents Identifying new disease-related patterns in medical imaging data with the help of machine learning enlarges the vocabulary of recognizable findings. This supports diagnostic and prognostic assessment. However, image appearance varies not only due to biological differences, but also due to imaging technology linked to vendors, scanning- or re- construction parameters. The resulting domain shifts impedes data representation learning strategies and the discovery of biologically meaningful cluster appearances. To address these challenges, we introduce an approach to actively learn the domain shift via post-hoc rotation of the data latent space, enabling disentanglement of biological and technical factors. Results on real-world heterogeneous clinical data showcase that the learned disentangled representation leads to stable clusters representing tissue-types across different acquisition settings. Cluster consistency is improved by +19.01% (ARI), +16.85% (NMI), and +12.39% (Dice) compared to the entangled representation, outperforming four state-of-the-art harmonization methods. When using the clusters to quantify tissue composition on idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis patients, the learned profiles enhance Cox survival prediction. This indicates that the proposed label-free framework facilitates biomarker discovery in multi-center routine imaging data. Code is available on GitHub https://github.com/cirmuw/latent-space-rotation-disentanglement.
format Preprint
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institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Disentanglement of Biological and Technical Factors via Latent Space Rotation in Clinical Imaging Improves Disease Pattern Discovery
Pan, Jeanny
Seeböck, Philipp
Fürböck, Christoph
Pochepnia, Svitlana
Straub, Jennifer
Beer, Lucian
Prosch, Helmut
Langs, Georg
Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition
Machine Learning
Identifying new disease-related patterns in medical imaging data with the help of machine learning enlarges the vocabulary of recognizable findings. This supports diagnostic and prognostic assessment. However, image appearance varies not only due to biological differences, but also due to imaging technology linked to vendors, scanning- or re- construction parameters. The resulting domain shifts impedes data representation learning strategies and the discovery of biologically meaningful cluster appearances. To address these challenges, we introduce an approach to actively learn the domain shift via post-hoc rotation of the data latent space, enabling disentanglement of biological and technical factors. Results on real-world heterogeneous clinical data showcase that the learned disentangled representation leads to stable clusters representing tissue-types across different acquisition settings. Cluster consistency is improved by +19.01% (ARI), +16.85% (NMI), and +12.39% (Dice) compared to the entangled representation, outperforming four state-of-the-art harmonization methods. When using the clusters to quantify tissue composition on idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis patients, the learned profiles enhance Cox survival prediction. This indicates that the proposed label-free framework facilitates biomarker discovery in multi-center routine imaging data. Code is available on GitHub https://github.com/cirmuw/latent-space-rotation-disentanglement.
title Disentanglement of Biological and Technical Factors via Latent Space Rotation in Clinical Imaging Improves Disease Pattern Discovery
topic Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition
Machine Learning
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2509.11436