Walker, Andrew2022-09-132022-09-132022-05https://hdl.handle.net/11299/241556University of Minnesota M.S. thesis. 2022. Major: Computer Science. Advisor: Ju Sun. 1 computer file (PDF); 52 pages.In AI-based histopathology, domain shifts are common and well-studied. However, this research focuses on stain and scanner variations, which do not show the full picture– shifts may be combinations of other shifts, or “invisible” shifts that are not obvious but still damage performance of machine learning models. Furthermore, it is important for models to generalize to these shifts without expensive or scarce annotations, especially in the histopathology space and if wanting to deploy models on a larger scale. Thus, there is a need for “reactive” domain generalization techniques: ones that adapt to domain shifts at test-time rather than requiring predictions of or examples of the shifts at training time. We conduct a literature review and introduce techniques that react to domain shifts rather than requiring a prediction of them in advance. We investigatetest time training, a technique for domain generalization that adapts model parameters at test-time through optimization of a secondary self-supervised task.enDigital PathologyDomain AdaptationDomain GeneralizationDomain ShiftMachine LearningAdaptive Domain Generalization for Digital Pathology ImagesThesis or Dissertation