Abstract: Many foundation models for digital pathology have been released recently. Benchmarking available methods then becomes paramount to get a clearer view of the research landscape. For this reason, we introduce THUNDER, a tile-level benchmark for digital pathology foundation models, allowing for efficient comparison of many models on diverse datasets with a series of downstream tasks, studying their feature spaces and assessing the robustness and uncertainty of predictions informed by their embeddings. Such foundation models are often used as feature extractors and combined with Multiple Instance Learning (MIL) aggregators at downstream time. Such aggregation must be efficient and reliable. We will focus on two specific examples of this: (I) HistAug, a fast and efficient generative model for controllable augmentations in the latent space of foundation models to perform data augmentation for MIL, and (ii) CAR-MIL, a method based on counterfactual attention regularisation to improve the reliability of attention maps of MIL methods.

Short-bio: Pierre Marza is a Postdoctoral Researcher at CentraleSupelec in the Biomathematics team of the MICS lab, studying Computer Vision and Deep Learning for Medical Imaging, with a focus on Digital Pathology. Prior to this, he was a PhD student at INSA Lyon, in the LIRIS and CITI labs, advised by Christian Wolf, and co-advised by Laetita Matignon and Olivier Simonin. He studied Visual Navigation, Embodied AI, Spatial Reasoning, more specifically how to learn to represent 3D space, generalize to new environments and master diverse tasks from light supervision.

Location: NCS 220

Zoom: https://stonybrook.zoom.us/j/94798224254?pwd=CFraer25qnpORbJ14aAVHRwaSJOjJM.1
I will be holding an informal 2-week short optimization course, to try
to cover a few important proofs in the field. The goal will be depth
over breadth, with focus on:

 - convergence proofs for gradient descent and stochastic gradient descent
 - energy functions and continuous time optimization
 - estimate sequences and Nesterov acceleration

and, time permitting, additional topics like variance reduction,
quasi-Newton methods, and Frank-Wolfe methods. If we go super fast, we
can spend a few days at the end brainstorming interesting research
project ideas.

Details: NCS 220 6:15pm-7:45pm, Monday-Friday, Feb 7-Feb 18.

In person only, since I plan to use the whiteboard (but may be recorded)

More details will be uploaded here (notes, specific schedule):
https://sites.google.com/view/optimization-short-course/home
All are welcome to attend BMI grand rounds talk by Dr. Le Lu on 04/14. 

Le Lu, Ph.D 
Executive Director, PAII Inc 
Johns Hopkins University
IEEE Fellow, MICCAI Board Member


Time: Wednesday, April 14, 2021 3:00 pm - 4:00 pm 

Zoom Meeting 
https://stonybrook.zoom.us/j/95617197636?pwd=KytzZ2pVRG9SZGpKZUtpNXJISjNjZz09 
Meeting ID: 956 1719 7636 Passcode: 924293

Title: 
In Search of Effective and Reproducible Clinical Imaging Biomarkers for Population Health and Oncology Applications of Screening, Diagnosis and Prognosis

Bio: 
Le Lu received a PhD in 2007 from Johns Hopkins University. During his first six years at Siemens, he made significant contributions to the company's CT colonography and Lung CAD product lines. From 2013 to 2017, Dr. Lu served as a staff scientist in the Radiology and Imaging Sciences department of the National Institutes of Health Clinical Center. He then went on to found Nvidia's medical image analysis group and he held the position of senior research manager until June 2018. Since then, he has been the Executive Director at PAII Inc., Bethesda Research lab, Maryland, USA which has become one of the leading industrial research labs in medical imaging. He was the main technical leader for two of the most-impactful public radiology image dataset releases (NIH ChestXray14, NIH DeepLesion 2018). He won NIH Clinical Center Director Award in 2017, NIH Mentor of the year award in 2015, and won numerous best paper awards in MICCAI and RSNA from 2016 to 2020 (over 10000 citations). In 2021, He was elected into IEEE Fellow class cited for his contribution to machine learning for cancer detection and diagnosis, and MICCAI society board member (MICCAI-Industry Workgroup Chair). He is currently an Associate Editor for IEEE Trans. Pattern Analysis and Machine Intelligence and IEEE Signal Processing Letters. He has served as an Area Chair for recent MICCAI, AAAI, CVPR, WACV, ICIP and ICHI conferences for 14 times.

Abstract: 
This talk will first give an overall on the work of employing deep learning to permit novel clinical workflows in two population health tasks, namely using conventional ultrasound for liver steatosis screening and quantitative reporting; osteoporosis screening via conventional X-ray imaging and AI readers. These two tasks were generally considered as infeasible tasks for human readers, but as proved by our scientific and clinical studies and peer-reviewed publications, they are suitable for AI readers. AI can be a supplementary and useful tool to assist physicians for cheaper and more convenient/precision patient management. Next, the main part of this talk describes a roadmap on three key problems in pancreatic cancer imaging solution: early screening, precision differential diagnosis, and deep prognosis on patient survival prediction. (1) Based on a new self- learning framework, we train the pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) segmentation model using a larger quantity of patients (≈1,000, four institutions), with a mix of annotated/unannotated venous or multi-phase CT images. Pseudo annotations are generated by combining two teacher models with different PDAC segmentation specialties on unannotated images, and can be further refined by a teaching assistant model that identifies associated vessels around the pancreas. Our approach makes it technically feasible for robust large-scale PDAC screening from multi-institutional multi-phase partially-annotated CT scans. (2) We propose a holistic segmentation-mesh classification network (SMCN) to provide patient-level diagnosis, by fully utilizing the geometry and location information. SMCN learns the pancreas and mass segmentation task and builds an anatomical correspondence-aware organ mesh model by progressively deforming a pancreas prototype on the raw segmentation mask. Our results are comparable to a multimodality clinical test that combines clinical, imaging, and molecular testing for clinical management of patients with cysts. (3) Accurate preoperative prognosis of resectable PDACs for personalized treatment is highly desired in clinical practice. We present a novel deep neural network for the survival prediction of resectable PDAC patients, 3D Contrast-Enhanced Convolutional Long Short-Term Memory network (CE- ConvLSTM), to derive the tumor attenuation signatures from CE-CT imaging studies. Our framework can significantly improve the prediction performances upon existing state-of-the-art survival analysis methods. This deep tumor signature has evidently added values (as a predictive biomarker) to be combined with the existing clinical staging system.

More information can be found at:
https://bmi.stonybrookmedicine.edu/sites/default/files/Lu_le_04_14.pdf























new virtual seminar series on Games, Decisions, and Networks will start this Friday. The series aims at bringing together researchers working on foundations and applications of games theory, decision theory, and networks from computer science, control, economics and operation research. 





The advisory board for the series comprises Asu Ozdaglar (MIT), Christos Papadimitriou (Columbia), Drew Fudenberg (MIT), Eva Tardos (Cornell), Matthew O. Jackson (Stanford), Ramesh Johari (Stanford), and Tamer Başar (UIUC). 
The first talk will be given by Costantinos Daskalakis (MIT) on January 22nd at noon ET, titled Equilibrium Computation and the Foundations of Deep Learning. Upcoming speakers include


- Rakesh Vohra (Upenn)
- Sanjeev Goyal (Cambridge)
- Aaron Roth (Upenn)
- Aislinn Bohren (Upenn)
- Jason Marden (UCSB)

and more to be added!

Launching a University-Wide AI Innovation Institute:

Last spring, the Office of the Provost led a group of over 30 faculty, staff, and administrators to consider how we can expand and leverage our strengths in AI research and discovery. The resulting recommendation was to launch a university-wide AI Innovation Institute (AI3), which would expand the Institute for AI-driven Discovery and Innovation established in 2018 from a department-level institute within the College of Engineering and Applied Science (CEAS) to the university-wide AI Innovation Institute reporting to the provost.

As a university-wide enterprise, the AI Innovation Institute (AI3) is intended to accelerate, coordinate, and organize AI innovation and education across Stony Brook. The institute will serve to empower the entire university community and beyond, catalyzing core AI research, curriculum innovation, and societal change in the ever-evolving landscape of knowledge work.

The AI Town Hall, led by AI3 Interim Director Skiena, is an open house event that will provide an overview of the major AI initiatives on campus, including the new AI Seed Grant program and Stony Brook's role in New York State's Empire AI program. The session will include time for questions and discussion about the future of AI at Stony Brook.

Speaker Petar Djuric Refreshments will be provided Deep Gaussian processes: Theory and applications Petar M. Djurić Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering Stony Brook University Abstract: Gaussian processes are an infinite-dimensional generalization of multivariate normal distributions. They provide a principled approach to learning with kernel machines and they have found wide applications in many fields. More recently, with the advance of deep learning, the concept of deep Gaussian processes has emerged. Deep Gaussian processes can be viewed as multilayer hierarchical organizations of Gaussian processes that are equivalent to infinitely wide multiple layer neural networks. Deep Gaussian processes have improved capacity for prediction and classification over standard Gaussian processes, while models based on them continue to allow for full Bayesian treatment and for applications when the amount of available data is limited. The theory of recent progress in deep Gaussian processes will be presented and some applications will be provided. Biosketch: Petar M. Djurić received the B.S. and M.S. degrees in electrical engineering from the University of Belgrade, Belgrade, Yugoslavia, respectively, and the Ph.D. degree in electrical engineering from the University of Rhode Island, Kingston, RI, USA. He is a SUNY Distinguished Professor and currently, he is a Chair of the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Stony Brook University, Stony Brook, NY, USA. Djurić was a recipient of the IEEE Signal Processing Magazine Best Paper Award in 2007 and the EURASIP Technical Achievement Award in 2012. From 2008 to 2009, he was a Distinguished Lecturer of the IEEE Signal Processing Society. He was the Editor-in-Chief of the IEEE Transactions on Signal and Information Processing over Networks (2015-2018). Djurić is a Fellow of IEEE and EURASIP

Chat with Sociology faculty as they share their paths to StonyBrook-what inspired their careers, what led them to teaching,and the experiences that shaped their academic journey.

Dr. Yongjun Zhang

Assistant Professor of Sociology, Departments of Sociology and AAAS

Join this opportunity to talk to Yongjun Zhang about his new interest in the following responsible usage of AI in addressing climate and health issues. Lunch will be served.

Location: SBS Level 4- Sociology Reading Room

View more event information

Abstract: Theory-internal work on opacity in phonology has been focused on the challenges these interactions present for one theory (rules, constraints) versus another. But there has also been interest in studying the formal, invariant properties of opaque and other process interactions (Chandlee et al. 2018; Bakovic and Blumenfeld 2024), though these works crucially differ in their underlying assumptions. In this talk I will recontextualize Chandlee et al. (2018)'s result that opaque maps are ISL in light of Bakovic and Blumenfeld (2024)'s recent formal typology of process interactions, and this recontextualization will provide an answer to an open question about the k-value of an interaction map. I will then discuss the implications of this collective formal understanding of opacity for a recent model of lexicon and phonological grammar learning (i.e., Hua and Jardine 2021, Chandlee and Jardine to appear).


Speaker: Prof. Jane Chandlee, Associate Professor in the Department of Linguistics at Haverford College

Location: IACS Seminar room.