79 research outputs found
How Does Pruning Impact Long-Tailed Multi-Label Medical Image Classifiers?
Pruning has emerged as a powerful technique for compressing deep neural
networks, reducing memory usage and inference time without significantly
affecting overall performance. However, the nuanced ways in which pruning
impacts model behavior are not well understood, particularly for long-tailed,
multi-label datasets commonly found in clinical settings. This knowledge gap
could have dangerous implications when deploying a pruned model for diagnosis,
where unexpected model behavior could impact patient well-being. To fill this
gap, we perform the first analysis of pruning's effect on neural networks
trained to diagnose thorax diseases from chest X-rays (CXRs). On two large CXR
datasets, we examine which diseases are most affected by pruning and
characterize class "forgettability" based on disease frequency and
co-occurrence behavior. Further, we identify individual CXRs where uncompressed
and heavily pruned models disagree, known as pruning-identified exemplars
(PIEs), and conduct a human reader study to evaluate their unifying qualities.
We find that radiologists perceive PIEs as having more label noise, lower image
quality, and higher diagnosis difficulty. This work represents a first step
toward understanding the impact of pruning on model behavior in deep
long-tailed, multi-label medical image classification. All code, model weights,
and data access instructions can be found at
https://github.com/VITA-Group/PruneCXR.Comment: Early accepted to MICCAI 202
Madness decolonized?: Madness as transnational identity in Gail Hornsteinâs Agnesâs Jacket
The US psychologist Gail Hornsteinâs monograph Agnesâs Jacket: A Psychologistâs Search for the Meanings of Madness (2009) is an important intervention in the identity politics of the mad movement. Hornstein offers a resignified vision of mad identity that embroiders the central trope of an âanti-colonialâ struggle to reclaim the experiential world âcolonizedâ by psychiatry. A series of literal and figurative appeals make recourse to the inner world and (corresponding) cultural world of the mad, as well as to the ethno-symbolic cultural materials of dormant nationhood. This rhetoric is augmented by a model in which the mad comprise a diaspora without an origin, coalescing into a single transnational community. The mad are also depicted as persons displaced from their metaphorical homeland, the âinnerâ world âcolonizedâ by the psychiatric regime. There are a number of difficulties with Hornsteinâs rhetoric, however. Her âethnicity-and-rightsâ response to the oppression of the mad is symptomatic of Western parochialism, while her proposed transmutation of putative psychopathology from limit upon identity to parameter of successful identity is open to contestation. Moreover, unless one accepts Hornsteinâs porous vision of mad identity, her self-ascribed insider status in relation to the mad community may present a problematic âre-colonizationâ of mad experience
Reproducibility of microvessel counts in breast cancer specimens
Assessment of tumour vascularity in core biopsy specimens may be a useful predictor of response to primary therapy. This study addresses practical methodological issues regarding accuracy of tumour vascularity assessments in different breast cancer specimens. Issues addressed in the study are variation caused by (i) inherent observer variation in the method, (ii) tumour heterogeneity and (iii) previous surgical manipulation of tumours. Microvessel counts were performed by two observers on separate occasions and by two different observers. Counts were performed on core biopsies and tumour sections taken simultaneously (n = 16) and with an intervening time interval (n = 21). In addition core biopsies were obtained from the same tumour on two separate occasions (n = 10). A highly significant correlation was found in counts performed by the same observers at different times and between two different observers. No significant correlation was found in counts of core biopsies and tumour sections taken either simultaneously or subsequently. No correlation was found between counts of sequential core biopsies. Study findings suggest that, although microvessel counts may be assessed reproducibly by the same and different observers, counts performed in core biopsies do not accurately reflect those of overall tumour, limiting their potential as predictive or prognostic markers. © 1999 Cancer Research Campaig
Contesting the psychiatric framing of ME / CFS
ME/CFS is a medically contested illness and its understanding, framing and treatment has been the subject of heated debate. This paper examines why framing the condition as a psychiatric issueâwhat we refer to as âpsychiatrisationââhas been so heavily contested by patients and activists. We argue that this contestation is not simply about stigmatising mental health conditions, as some have suggested, but relates to how people diagnosed with mental illness are treated in society, psychiatry and the law. We highlight the potentially harmful consequences of psychiatrisation which can lead to peopleâs experiential knowledge being discredited. This stems, in part, from a psychiatric-specific form of âepistemic injusticeâ which can result in unhelpful, unwanted and forced treatments. This understanding helps explain why the psychiatrisation of ME/CFS has become the focus of such bitter debate and why psychiatry itself has become such a significant field of contention, for both ME/CFS patients and mental health service users/survivors. Notwithstanding important differences, both reject the way psychiatry denies patient explanations and understandings, and therefore share a collective struggle for justice and legitimation. Reasons why this shared struggle has not resulted in alliances between ME and mental health activists are noted
Medium-size-vessel vasculitis
Medium-size-artery vasculitides do occur in childhood and manifest, in the main, as polyarteritis nodosa (PAN), cutaneous PAN and Kawasaki disease. Of these, PAN is the most serious, with high morbidity and not inconsequential mortality rates. New classification criteria for PAN have been validated that will have value in epidemiological studies and clinical trials. Renal involvement is common and recent therapeutic advances may result in improved treatment options. Cutaneous PAN is a milder disease characterised by periodic exacerbations and often associated with streptococcal infection. There is controversy as to whether this is a separate entity or part of the systemic PAN spectrum. Kawasaki disease is an acute self-limiting systemic vasculitis, the second commonest vasculitis in childhood and the commonest cause of childhood-acquired heart disease. Renal manifestations occur and include tubulointerstitial nephritis and renal failure. An infectious trigger and a genetic predisposition seem likely. Intravenous immunoglobulin (IV-Ig) and aspirin are effective therapeutically, but in resistant cases, either steroid or infliximab have a role. Greater understanding of the pathogenetic mechanisms involved in these three types of vasculitis and better long-term follow-up data will lead to improved therapy and prediction of prognosis
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