The medical imaging domain frequently encounters the dual challenges of annotation scarcity and class imbalance. A critical issue lies in effectively extracting information from limited labeled data while mitigating the dominance of head classes. The existing approaches often overlook in-depth modeling of sample relationships in low-dimensional spaces, while rigid or suboptimal dynamic thresholding strategies in pseudo-label generation are susceptible to noisy label interference, leading to cumulative bias amplification during the early training phases. To address these issues, we propose a semi-supervised medical image classification framework combining labeled data-contrastive learning with class-adaptive pseudo-labeling (CLCP-MT), comprising two key components: the semantic discrimination enhancement (SDE) module and the class-adaptive pseudo-label refinement (CAPR) module. The former incorporates supervised contrastive learning on limited labeled data to fully exploit discriminative information in latent structural spaces, thereby significantly amplifying the value of sparse annotations. The latter dynamically calibrates pseudo-label confidence thresholds according to real-time learning progress across different classes, effectively reducing head-class dominance while enhancing tail-class recognition performance. These synergistic modules collectively achieve breakthroughs in both information utilization efficiency and model robustness, demonstrating superior performance in class-imbalanced scenarios. Extensive experiments on the ISIC2018 skin lesion dataset and Chest X-ray14 thoracic disease dataset validate CLCP-MT’s efficacy. With only 20% labeled and 80% unlabeled data, our framework achieves a 10.38% F1-score improvement on ISIC2018 and a 2.64% AUC increase on Chest X-ray14 compared to the baselines, confirming its effectiveness and superiority under annotation-deficient and class-imbalanced conditions.
Yang et al. (Sat,) studied this question.
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