Many practical medical imaging scenarios include categories that are under-represented but still crucial. The relevance of image recognition models to real-world applications lies in their ability to generalize to these rare classes as well as unseen classes. Real-world generalization requires taking into account the various complexities that can be encountered in the real-world. First, training data is highly imbalanced, which may lead to model exhibiting bias toward the more frequently represented classes. Moreover, real-world data may contain unseen classes that need to be identified, and model performance is affected by the data scarcity. While medical image recognition has been extensively addressed in the literature, current methods do not take into account all the intricacies in the real-world scenarios. To this end, we propose an open-set learning method for highly imbalanced medical datasets using a semi-supervised approach. Understanding the adverse impact of long-tail distribution at the inherent model characteristics, we implement a regularization strategy at the feature level complemented by a classifier normalization technique. We conduct extensive experiments on the publicly available datasets, ISIC2018, ISIC2019, and TissueMNIST with various numbers of labelled samples. Our analysis shows that addressing the impact of long-tail data in classification significantly improves the overall performance of the network in terms of closed-set and open-set accuracies on all datasets. Our code and trained models will be made publicly available atthis https URL.
View on arXiv@article{kareem2025_2505.14846, title={ Open-Set Semi-Supervised Learning for Long-Tailed Medical Datasets }, author={ Daniya Najiha A. Kareem and Jean Lahoud and Mustansar Fiaz and Amandeep Kumar and Hisham Cholakkal }, journal={arXiv preprint arXiv:2505.14846}, year={ 2025 } }