In recent years, deep learning models have revolutionized medical image
interpretation, offering substantial improvements in diagnostic accuracy.
However, these models often struggle with challenging images where critical
features are partially or fully occluded, which is a common scenario in
clinical practice. In this paper, we propose a novel curriculum learning-based
approach to train deep learning models to handle occluded medical images
effectively. Our method progressively introduces occlusion, starting from
clear, unobstructed images and gradually moving to images with increasing
occlusion levels. This ordered learning process, akin to human learning, allows
the model to first grasp simple, discernable patterns and subsequently build
upon this knowledge to understand more complicated, occluded scenarios.
Furthermore, we present three novel occlusion synthesis methods, namely
Wasserstein Curriculum Learning (WCL), Information Adaptive Learning (IAL), and
Geodesic Curriculum Learning (GCL). Our extensive experiments on diverse
medical image datasets demonstrate substantial improvements in model robustness
and diagnostic accuracy over conventional training methodologies.Comment: 20 pages, 3 figures, 1 tabl