Researcher profile

Anna Anikina

Anna Anikina contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

2 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

Visual Search Patterns in 3D Pancreatic Imaging: An Eye Tracking Study

Eye tracking has emerged as a powerful tool for examining visual perception and search strategies in various domains, including medicine. While it is relatively straightforward to apply in 2D settings, its use in 3D medical imaging remains challenging and not yet well explored. This gap is particularly relevant for radiology, where volumetric images such as computed tomography (CT) scans are routinely read by medical experts. Radiologists typically interpret these images by navigating through hundreds of 2D slices, most often viewed in the axial projection. A taxonomy of eye movement data during navigation through a CT volume could be valuable to understand how radiologists approach diagnostic tasks. As an example of the derived taxonomy, we asked two radiologists to search abdominal CTs of the pancreas. We collect eye tracking data and align eye gaze movements with slice navigation to visualize the representation of the pancreas through volume and analyze clinicians' gaze behavior in both space and time.

preprint2022arXiv

DASHA: Decentralized Autofocusing System with Hierarchical Agents

State-of-the-art object detection models are frequently trained offline using available datasets, such as ImageNet: large and overly diverse data that are unbalanced and hard to cluster semantically. This kind of training drops the object detection performance should the change in illumination, in the environmental conditions (e.g., rain), or in the lens positioning (out-of-focus blur) occur. We propose a decentralized hierarchical multi-agent deep reinforcement learning approach for intelligently controlling the camera and the lens focusing settings, leading to a significant improvement beyond the capacity of the popular detection models (YOLO, Faster R-CNN, and Retina are considered). The algorithm relies on the latent representation of the camera's stream and, thus, it is the first method to allow a completely no-reference tuning of the camera, where the system trains itself to auto-focus itself.