Plasticine: A Traceable Diffusion Model for Medical Image Translation
By: Tianyang Zhanng , Xinxing Cheng , Jun Cheng and more
Domain gaps arising from variations in imaging devices and population distributions pose significant challenges for machine learning in medical image analysis. Existing image-to-image translation methods primarily aim to learn mappings between domains, often generating diverse synthetic data with variations in anatomical scale and shape, but they usually overlook spatial correspondence during the translation process. For clinical applications, traceability, defined as the ability to provide pixel-level correspondences between original and translated images, is equally important. This property enhances clinical interpretability but has been largely overlooked in previous approaches. To address this gap, we propose Plasticine, which is, to the best of our knowledge, the first end-to-end image-to-image translation framework explicitly designed with traceability as a core objective. Our method combines intensity translation and spatial transformation within a denoising diffusion framework. This design enables the generation of synthetic images with interpretable intensity transitions and spatially coherent deformations, supporting pixel-wise traceability throughout the translation process.
Similar Papers
TraceTrans: Translation and Spatial Tracing for Surgical Prediction
Image and Video Processing
Makes medical pictures show future results accurately.
CycleDiff: Cycle Diffusion Models for Unpaired Image-to-image Translation
CV and Pattern Recognition
Changes pictures from one style to another.
MedDIFT: Multi-Scale Diffusion-Based Correspondence in 3D Medical Imaging
CV and Pattern Recognition
Matches medical scans better without training.