Automatic Discovery of Disease Subgroups by Contrasting with Healthy Controls
Pith reviewed 2026-05-21 06:02 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
Contrasting patients with healthy controls lets a deep model isolate subgroups driven only by disease factors.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
Assuming that healthy subjects share common but irrelevant factors of variation with the patients, we motivate and develop a Contrastive Subgroup Discovery method, entitled Deep UCSL. By contrasting patients with controls, Deep UCSL identifies subgroups driven solely by pathological factors, ignoring common variability shared with healthy subjects. Our framework employs a deep feature extractor to learn a discriminative representation space. Mathematically, we derive a novel loss based on the conditional joint likelihood of latent clusters and patient/control labels, optimized via an Expectation-Maximization strategy alternating between subgroup inference and feature encoder updates. A ualar
What carries the argument
Deep UCSL contrastive framework that uses a deep feature extractor and an EM-optimized loss on the joint likelihood of latent clusters and patient/control labels, plus regularization to suppress shared variability.
If this is right
- Subgroups become driven only by pathological factors rather than by variations also present in healthy subjects.
- Quantitative measures of subgroup quality improve on both synthetic digit data and four distinct medical imaging collections.
- The learned representations emphasize disease-specific signals while down-weighting common healthy variation.
- The same EM alternation between cluster assignment and encoder update can be reused on new patient-control cohorts.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- The contrastive principle could be tested on non-imaging modalities such as genomic or electronic health record data to check whether the same suppression of shared variation improves clustering.
- If the method succeeds, downstream tasks like treatment-response prediction might benefit from using the discovered subgroups as strata.
- Direct comparison with other contrastive or domain-adaptation techniques would clarify whether the specific EM-plus-regularization combination is necessary for the reported gains.
Load-bearing premise
Healthy subjects share common but irrelevant factors of variation with the patients that can be safely ignored or suppressed to isolate purely pathological drivers of subgroups.
What would settle it
If subgroup homogeneity or interpretability shows no gain over non-contrastive baselines on a held-out medical imaging dataset, or if controls do not exhibit the assumed shared variability, the central claim would not hold.
read the original abstract
In biomedical Subgroup Discovery, practitioners are interested in discovering interpretable and homogeneous subgroups within a group of patients. In this paper, assuming that healthy subjects (i.e., controls) share common but irrelevant factors of variation with the patients, we motivate and develop a Contrastive Subgroup Discovery method, entitled Deep UCSL. By contrasting patients with controls, Deep UCSL identifies subgroups driven solely by pathological factors, ignoring common variability shared with healthy subjects. Our framework employs a deep feature extractor to learn a discriminative representation space. Mathematically, we derive a novel loss based on the conditional joint likelihood of latent clusters and patient/control labels, optimized via an Expectation-Maximization strategy alternating between subgroup inference and feature encoder updates. A regularization term further encourages representations to capture disease-specific variability while ignoring variability shared with controls. Compared to previous related works, our approach quantitatively improves the quality of the estimated subgroups, as demonstrated on a MNIST example and four distinct real medical imaging datasets. Code and datasets are available at: https://github.com/rlouiset/deep_ucsl.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The manuscript proposes Deep UCSL, a contrastive subgroup discovery method that contrasts patients with healthy controls to identify subgroups driven solely by pathological factors. It employs a deep feature extractor, derives a loss from the conditional joint likelihood of latent clusters and patient/control labels, optimizes via EM alternation between subgroup inference and encoder updates, and adds a regularization term to suppress shared variability. Quantitative improvements in subgroup quality are reported on an MNIST example and four real medical imaging datasets, with code and data released.
Significance. If the core assumption holds and the empirical gains are robust, the work offers a principled way to isolate pathology-specific structure in biomedical data, which could improve interpretability of patient subgroups. The self-contained loss derivation, EM procedure, and public code release are clear strengths that support reproducibility. The approach extends contrastive ideas to subgroup discovery but its broader impact depends on how well the control contrast generalizes when non-pathological factors differ in distribution between groups.
major comments (2)
- [Method and Experiments] The central claim that subgroups are 'driven solely by pathological factors' (Abstract) rests on the assumption that controls capture all shared non-pathological variability. No analysis or experiment is presented showing that the learned representations are uncorrelated with known non-disease covariates such as age, sex, or scanner after training; without this check the regularization term alone does not guarantee isolation of pathological drivers.
- [Abstract and Results] Abstract and Results: quantitative improvements are asserted on MNIST and four medical datasets, yet no exact metrics, baseline methods, statistical tests, data splits, or cross-validation details are supplied. This absence is load-bearing for the claim of improvement over prior work and prevents verification that post-hoc choices did not inflate performance.
minor comments (2)
- [Method] Clarify the precise form of the regularization term and its weighting hyper-parameter in the loss; the current description leaves open how strongly it enforces the desired separation versus the likelihood term.
- [Experiments] Figure captions and axis labels in the MNIST and medical-dataset visualizations should explicitly state what quantity is plotted (e.g., t-SNE of the learned representation colored by inferred subgroup).
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the constructive and detailed feedback. We address each major comment below and indicate the revisions we will make to strengthen the manuscript.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: [Method and Experiments] The central claim that subgroups are 'driven solely by pathological factors' (Abstract) rests on the assumption that controls capture all shared non-pathological variability. No analysis or experiment is presented showing that the learned representations are uncorrelated with known non-disease covariates such as age, sex, or scanner after training; without this check the regularization term alone does not guarantee isolation of pathological drivers.
Authors: We agree that an explicit check for correlation between the learned representations and known non-disease covariates would provide stronger empirical support for the claim that pathological factors are isolated. In the revised manuscript we will add a new analysis subsection in the Experiments section. For the medical imaging datasets that include age and sex metadata, we will report Pearson and Spearman correlations between the final representations and these covariates, as well as any available scanner information. Where such metadata are unavailable we will explicitly note the limitation and discuss how the regularization term is intended to mitigate shared variability. These additions will be accompanied by the corresponding code updates in the public repository. revision: yes
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Referee: [Abstract and Results] Abstract and Results: quantitative improvements are asserted on MNIST and four medical datasets, yet no exact metrics, baseline methods, statistical tests, data splits, or cross-validation details are supplied. This absence is load-bearing for the claim of improvement over prior work and prevents verification that post-hoc choices did not inflate performance.
Authors: We acknowledge that the current presentation of results lacks sufficient detail for full reproducibility and independent verification. In the revised manuscript we will expand both the Abstract and the Results section. The Abstract will be updated to report the primary quantitative metrics (e.g., adjusted Rand index, normalized mutual information) and the key baselines. A new subsection will provide: (i) exact definitions of all metrics, (ii) the complete list of baseline methods with references, (iii) statistical tests performed together with p-values and correction method, (iv) precise train/validation/test split ratios and any stratification used, and (v) the cross-validation procedure (including number of folds and random seeds). All experimental details will be cross-referenced to the released code. revision: yes
Circularity Check
Derivation from conditional joint likelihood is self-contained
full rationale
The paper derives its loss directly from the conditional joint likelihood of latent clusters and observed patient/control labels, then applies standard EM alternation for optimization. This follows conventional probabilistic clustering with side information and does not reduce any claimed result to the inputs by construction. The added regularization term is explicitly motivated to promote disease-specific variability rather than being a fitted quantity renamed as a prediction. No self-citation chains, uniqueness theorems imported from prior author work, or ansatzes smuggled via citation appear as load-bearing steps in the provided description. The central claim therefore rests on the modeling assumptions and derivation rather than tautology or statistical forcing.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
free parameters (2)
- regularization weight
- number of subgroups
axioms (1)
- domain assumption healthy subjects share common but irrelevant factors of variation with the patients
Reference graph
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