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RSNA Press Release

RSNA Announces Pneumonia Detection Machine Learning Challenge

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Released: August 22, 2018

OAK BROOK, Ill. (August 21, 2018) —The Radiological Society of North America (RSNA) has launched its second annual machine learning challenge. The RSNA Pneumonia Detection challenge invites teams to develop algorithms to identify and localize pneumonia in chest X-rays.

“The expectation that artificial intelligence will soon provide valuable tools for radiology continues to grow,” said Luciano Prevedello, M.D., M.P.H., chief of the Division of Medical Imaging Informatics at The Ohio State University and chair of the Machine Learning Steering Subcommittee of the RSNA Radiology Informatics Committee (RIC). “By organizing machine learning data challenges, RSNA is playing an important role in fostering and demonstrating these capabilities.”

A machine learning data challenge is a competition among artificial intelligence researchers to create applications that perform a defined task according to specified performance measures. The Pneumonia Detection challenge will be based on a publicly available dataset published by the National Institutes of Health that has been carefully annotated by multiple expert reviewers. The RSNA Machine Learning Steering Subcommittee collaborated with volunteer specialists from the Society of Thoracic Radiology to annotate the dataset, identifying abnormal areas in the lung images and assessing the probability of pneumonia.

“A successful Machine Learning challenge needs to begin with a data set accurate and large enough to provide ‘ground truth,’” said Safwan Halabi, M.D., medical director of radiology informatics at Stanford University and chair of the Machine Learning Data Standards Subcommittee of the RIC. “Developers build their applications by training them on the dataset and challenge organizers use a segment of the dataset to measure their performance.”

This year’s challenge will be conducted using the competition platform provided by Kaggle, Inc. (a subsidiary of Alphabet, Inc., which is also the parent company of Google). The Kaggle platform will provide a home page for the challenge, controlled access to the challenge datasets, a discussion forum for participants, and the repository where they submit their results. Kaggle has recognized the RSNA Pneumonia Detection Challenge as a public good and will provide $30,000 in prize money for the winning entries.

The challenge will have two phases: training and evaluation. During the training phase, which starts today and runs until October 17, participants will use the training portion of the dataset to develop algorithms that duplicate the annotations provided by the radiologist observers. In the evaluation phase, which runs October 18-24, participants will run their algorithms on the testing portion of the dataset, from which the annotations are withheld. October 24 is the deadline for submission of test results, which will then be compared to the “ground-truth” values supplied by the annotations of the expert observers to determine the winners. The results will be announced in early November, and the top submissions will be recognized November 26 in a session at the Machine Learning Showcase during the RSNA 2018 annual meeting at McCormick Place in Chicago.

Last year’s challenge had more than 200 participants, many of whom formed teams comprising both data scientists and radiologists. “Radiologists have a critical role to play in the challenge, even if they don’t have extensive experience with machine learning,” Dr. Prevedello said. “They can provide insight, based on their clinical experience, to refine or supplement the annotations on the training data set and help developers identify systematic errors in the results of their algorithms.”

Radiologists interested in participating can set up a free account on the Kaggle site and express their interests and qualifications in the forum for the RSNA Pneumonia Detection challenge. Information is available on the challenge site: https://www.kaggle.com/c/rsna-pneumonia-detection-challenge or by contacting RSNA staff at informatics@rsna.org.

RSNA is an association of over 54,200 radiologists, radiation oncologists, medical physicists and related scientists, promoting excellence in patient care and health care delivery through education, research and technologic innovation. The Society is based in Oak Brook, Ill. (RSNA.org)