Papers
Topics
Authors
Recent
Assistant
AI Research Assistant
Well-researched responses based on relevant abstracts and paper content.
Custom Instructions Pro
Preferences or requirements that you'd like Emergent Mind to consider when generating responses.
Gemini 2.5 Flash
Gemini 2.5 Flash 155 tok/s
Gemini 2.5 Pro 42 tok/s Pro
GPT-5 Medium 34 tok/s Pro
GPT-5 High 31 tok/s Pro
GPT-4o 101 tok/s Pro
Kimi K2 213 tok/s Pro
GPT OSS 120B 422 tok/s Pro
Claude Sonnet 4.5 36 tok/s Pro
2000 character limit reached

SCEHR: Supervised Contrastive Learning for Clinical Risk Prediction using Electronic Health Records (2110.04943v1)

Published 11 Oct 2021 in cs.LG

Abstract: Contrastive learning has demonstrated promising performance in image and text domains either in a self-supervised or a supervised manner. In this work, we extend the supervised contrastive learning framework to clinical risk prediction problems based on longitudinal electronic health records (EHR). We propose a general supervised contrastive loss $\mathcal{L}{\text{Contrastive Cross Entropy} } + \lambda \mathcal{L}{\text{Supervised Contrastive Regularizer}}$ for learning both binary classification (e.g. in-hospital mortality prediction) and multi-label classification (e.g. phenotyping) in a unified framework. Our supervised contrastive loss practices the key idea of contrastive learning, namely, pulling similar samples closer and pushing dissimilar ones apart from each other, simultaneously by its two components: $\mathcal{L}{\text{Contrastive Cross Entropy} }$ tries to contrast samples with learned anchors which represent positive and negative clusters, and $\mathcal{L}{\text{Supervised Contrastive Regularizer}}$ tries to contrast samples with each other according to their supervised labels. We propose two versions of the above supervised contrastive loss and our experiments on real-world EHR data demonstrate that our proposed loss functions show benefits in improving the performance of strong baselines and even state-of-the-art models on benchmarking tasks for clinical risk predictions. Our loss functions work well with extremely imbalanced data which are common for clinical risk prediction problems. Our loss functions can be easily used to replace (binary or multi-label) cross-entropy loss adopted in existing clinical predictive models. The Pytorch code is released at \url{https://github.com/calvin-zcx/SCEHR}.

Citations (12)

Summary

We haven't generated a summary for this paper yet.

Lightbulb Streamline Icon: https://streamlinehq.com

Continue Learning

We haven't generated follow-up questions for this paper yet.

Authors (2)

List To Do Tasks Checklist Streamline Icon: https://streamlinehq.com

Collections

Sign up for free to add this paper to one or more collections.

Github Logo Streamline Icon: https://streamlinehq.com

GitHub

Don't miss out on important new AI/ML research

See which papers are being discussed right now on X, Reddit, and more:

“Emergent Mind helps me see which AI papers have caught fire online.”

Philip

Philip

Creator, AI Explained on YouTube