Affiliations 

  • 1 Electrical and Computer Systems Engineering Discipline, School of Engineering, Monash University Malaysia, 47500, Bandar Sunway, Selangor, Malaysia. [email protected]
  • 2 Electrical and Computer Systems Engineering Discipline, School of Engineering, Monash University Malaysia, 47500, Bandar Sunway, Selangor, Malaysia
Int J Comput Assist Radiol Surg, 2021 Aug;16(8):1319-1324.
PMID: 34060010 DOI: 10.1007/s11548-021-02415-z

Abstract

PURPOSE: In recent years, Non-Local-based methods have been successfully applied to lung nodule classification. However, these methods offer 2D attention or limited 3D attention to low-resolution feature maps. Moreover, they still depend on a convenient local filter such as convolution as full 3D attention is expensive to compute and requires a big dataset, which might not be available.

METHODS: We propose to use 3D Axial-Attention, which requires a fraction of the computing power of a regular Non-Local network (i.e., self-attention). Unlike a regular Non-Local network, the 3D Axial-Attention network applies the attention operation to each axis separately. Additionally, we solve the invariant position problem of the Non-Local network by proposing to add 3D positional encoding to shared embeddings.

RESULTS: We validated the proposed method on 442 benign nodules and 406 malignant nodules, extracted from the public LIDC-IDRI dataset by following a rigorous experimental setup using only nodules annotated by at least three radiologists. Our results show that the 3D Axial-Attention model achieves state-of-the-art performance on all evaluation metrics, including AUC and Accuracy.

CONCLUSIONS: The proposed model provides full 3D attention, whereby every element (i.e., pixel) in the 3D volume space attends to every other element in the nodule effectively. Thus, the 3D Axial-Attention network can be used in all layers without the need for local filters. The experimental results show the importance of full 3D attention for classifying lung nodules.

* Title and MeSH Headings from MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine.