Rapid Convolutional Neural Networks for Gram-Stained Image Classification at Inference Time on Mobile Devices: Empirical Study from Transfer Learning to Optimization

Biomedicines. 2022 Nov 4;10(11):2808. doi: 10.3390/biomedicines10112808.

Abstract

Despite the emergence of mobile health and the success of deep learning (DL), deploying production-ready DL models to resource-limited devices remains challenging. Especially, during inference time, the speed of DL models becomes relevant. We aimed to accelerate inference time for Gram-stained analysis, which is a tedious and manual task involving microorganism detection on whole slide images. Three DL models were optimized in three steps: transfer learning, pruning and quantization and then evaluated on two Android smartphones. Most convolutional layers (≥80%) had to be retrained for adaptation to the Gram-stained classification task. The combination of pruning and quantization demonstrated its utility to reduce the model size and inference time without compromising model quality. Pruning mainly contributed to model size reduction by 15×, while quantization reduced inference time by 3× and decreased model size by 4×. The combination of two reduced the baseline model by an overall factor of 46×. Optimized models were smaller than 6 MB and were able to process one image in <0.6 s on a Galaxy S10. Our findings demonstrate that methods for model compression are highly relevant for the successful deployment of DL solutions to resource-limited devices.

Keywords: Gram-stained classification; deep learning; mHealth; model compression; pruning; quantization; rapid inference time.

Grants and funding

M.E.M. and T.G. were supported by funding from the German Ministry for Education and Research (BMBF) within the framework of the Medical Informatics Initiative (MIRACUM Consortium: Medical Informatics for Research and Care in University Medicine; 01ZZ1801E). M.E.M has received funding from the BMBF within the framework of the Medical Informatics Initiative (MIRACUM Consortium: Medical Informatics for Holistic Disease Models in Personalized and Preventive Medicine, MIDorAI; 01ZZ2020). We acknowledge financial support by Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft within the funding programme “Open Access Publikationskosten” as well as by Heidelberg University.