2,859 research outputs found

    Schizo-Net: A novel Schizophrenia Diagnosis Framework Using Late Fusion Multimodal Deep Learning on Electroencephalogram-Based Brain Connectivity Indices

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    Schizophrenia (SCZ) is a serious mental condition that causes hallucinations, delusions, and disordered thinking. Traditionally, SCZ diagnosis involves the subject’s interview by a skilled psychiatrist. The process needs time and is bound to human errors and bias. Recently, brain connectivity indices have been used in a few pattern recognition methods to discriminate neuro-psychiatric patients from healthy subjects. The study presents Schizo-Net , a novel, highly accurate, and reliable SCZ diagnosis model based on a late multimodal fusion of estimated brain connectivity indices from EEG activity. First, the raw EEG activity is pre-processed exhaustively to remove unwanted artifacts. Next, six brain connectivity indices are estimated from the windowed EEG activity, and six different deep learning architectures (with varying neurons and hidden layers) are trained. The present study is the first which considers a large number of brain connectivity indices, especially for SCZ. A detailed study was also performed that identifies SCZ-related changes occurring in brain connectivity, and the vital significance of BCI is drawn in this regard to identify the biomarkers of the disease. Schizo-Net surpasses current models and achieves 99.84% accuracy. An optimum deep learning architecture selection is also performed for improved classification. The study also establishes that Late fusion technique outperforms single architecture-based prediction in diagnosing SCZ

    An Overview on Artificial Intelligence Techniques for Diagnosis of Schizophrenia Based on Magnetic Resonance Imaging Modalities: Methods, Challenges, and Future Works

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    Schizophrenia (SZ) is a mental disorder that typically emerges in late adolescence or early adulthood. It reduces the life expectancy of patients by 15 years. Abnormal behavior, perception of emotions, social relationships, and reality perception are among its most significant symptoms. Past studies have revealed the temporal and anterior lobes of hippocampus regions of brain get affected by SZ. Also, increased volume of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and decreased volume of white and gray matter can be observed due to this disease. The magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is the popular neuroimaging technique used to explore structural/functional brain abnormalities in SZ disorder owing to its high spatial resolution. Various artificial intelligence (AI) techniques have been employed with advanced image/signal processing methods to obtain accurate diagnosis of SZ. This paper presents a comprehensive overview of studies conducted on automated diagnosis of SZ using MRI modalities. Main findings, various challenges, and future works in developing the automated SZ detection are described in this paper

    Investigation of neural activity in Schizophrenia during resting-state MEG : using non-linear dynamics and machine-learning to shed light on information disruption in the brain

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    Environ 25% de la population mondiale est atteinte de troubles psychiatriques qui sont typiquement associés à des problèmes comportementaux, fonctionnels et/ou cognitifs et dont les corrélats neurophysiologiques sont encore très mal compris. Non seulement ces dysfonctionnements réduisent la qualité de vie des individus touchés, mais ils peuvent aussi devenir un fardeau pour les proches et peser lourd dans l’économie d’une société. Cibler les mécanismes responsables du fonctionnement atypique du cerveau en identifiant des biomarqueurs plus robustes permettrait le développement de traitements plus efficaces. Ainsi, le premier objectif de cette thèse est de contribuer à une meilleure caractérisation des changements dynamiques cérébraux impliqués dans les troubles mentaux, plus précisément dans la schizophrénie et les troubles d’humeur. Pour ce faire, les premiers chapitres de cette thèse présentent, en intégral, deux revues de littératures systématiques que nous avons menées sur les altérations de connectivité cérébrale, au repos, chez les patients schizophrènes, dépressifs et bipolaires. Ces revues révèlent que, malgré des avancées scientifiques considérables dans l’étude de l’altération de la connectivité cérébrale fonctionnelle, la dimension temporelle des mécanismes cérébraux à l’origine de l’atteinte de l’intégration de l’information dans ces maladies, particulièrement de la schizophrénie, est encore mal comprise. Par conséquent, le deuxième objectif de cette thèse est de caractériser les changements cérébraux associés à la schizophrénie dans le domaine temporel. Nous présentons deux études dans lesquelles nous testons l’hypothèse que la « disconnectivité temporelle » serait un biomarqueur important en schizophrénie. Ces études explorent les déficits d’intégration temporelle en schizophrénie, en quantifiant les changements de la dynamique neuronale dite invariante d’échelle à partir des données magnétoencéphalographiques (MEG) enregistrés au repos chez des patients et des sujets contrôles. En particulier, nous utilisons (1) la LRTCs (long-range temporal correlation, ou corrélation temporelle à longue-distance) calculée à partir des oscillations neuronales et (2) des analyses multifractales pour caractériser des modifications de l’activité cérébrale arythmique. Par ailleurs, nous développons des modèles de classification (en apprentissage-machine supervisé) pour mieux cerner les attributs corticaux et sous-corticaux permettant une distinction robuste entre les patients et les sujets sains. Vu que ces études se basent sur des données MEG spontanées enregistrées au repos soit avec les yeux ouvert, ou les yeux fermées, nous nous sommes par la suite intéressés à la possibilité de trouver un marqueur qui combinerait ces enregistrements. La troisième étude originale explore donc l’utilité des modulations de l’amplitude spectrale entre yeux ouverts et fermées comme prédicteur de schizophrénie. Les résultats de ces études démontrent des changements cérébraux importants chez les patients schizophrènes au niveau de la dynamique d’invariance d’échelle. Elles suggèrent une dégradation du traitement temporel de l’information chez les patients, qui pourrait être liée à leurs symptômes cognitifs et comportementaux. L’approche multimodale de cette thèse, combinant la magétoencéphalographie, analyses non-linéaires et apprentissage machine, permet de mieux caractériser l’organisation spatio-temporelle du signal cérébrale au repos chez les patients atteints de schizophrénie et chez des individus sains. Les résultats fournissent de nouvelles preuves supportant l’hypothèse d’une « disconnectivité temporelle » en schizophrénie, et étendent les recherches antérieures, en explorant la contribution des structures cérébrales profondes et en employant des mesures non-linéaires avancées encore sous-exploitées dans ce domaine. L’ensemble des résultats de cette thèse apporte une contribution significative à la quête de nouveaux biomarqueurs de la schizophrénie et démontre l’importance d’élucider les altérations des propriétés temporelles de l’activité cérébrales intrinsèque en psychiatrie. Les études présentées offrent également un cadre méthodologique pouvant être étendu à d’autres psychopathologie, telles que la dépression.Psychiatric disorders affect nearly a quarter of the world’s population. These typically bring about debilitating behavioural, functional and/or cognitive problems, for which the underlying neural mechanisms are poorly understood. These symptoms can significantly reduce the quality of life of affected individuals, impact those close to them, and bring on an economic burden on society. Hence, targeting the baseline neurophysiology associated with psychopathologies, by identifying more robust biomarkers, would improve the development of effective treatments. The first goal of this thesis is thus to contribute to a better characterization of neural dynamic alterations in mental health illnesses, specifically in schizophrenia and mood disorders. Accordingly, the first chapter of this thesis presents two systematic literature reviews, which investigate the resting-state changes in brain connectivity in schizophrenia, depression and bipolar disorder patients. Great strides have been made in neuroimaging research in identifying alterations in functional connectivity. However, these two reviews reveal a gap in the knowledge about the temporal basis of the neural mechanisms involved in the disruption of information integration in these pathologies, particularly in schizophrenia. Therefore, the second goal of this thesis is to characterize the baseline temporal neural alterations of schizophrenia. We present two studies for which we hypothesize that the resting temporal dysconnectivity could serve as a key biomarker in schizophrenia. These studies explore temporal integration deficits in schizophrenia by quantifying neural alterations of scale-free dynamics using resting-state magnetoencephalography (MEG) data. Specifically, we use (1) long-range temporal correlation (LRTC) analysis on oscillatory activity and (2) multifractal analysis on arrhythmic brain activity. In addition, we develop classification models (based on supervised machine-learning) to detect the cortical and sub-cortical features that allow for a robust division of patients and healthy controls. Given that these studies are based on MEG spontaneous brain activity, recorded at rest with either eyes-open or eyes-closed, we then explored the possibility of finding a distinctive feature that would combine both types of resting-state recordings. Thus, the third study investigates whether alterations in spectral amplitude between eyes-open and eyes-closed conditions can be used as a possible marker for schizophrenia. Overall, the three studies show changes in the scale-free dynamics of schizophrenia patients at rest that suggest a deterioration of the temporal processing of information in patients, which might relate to their cognitive and behavioural symptoms. The multimodal approach of this thesis, combining MEG, non-linear analyses and machine-learning, improves the characterization of the resting spatiotemporal neural organization of schizophrenia patients and healthy controls. Our findings provide new evidence for the temporal dysconnectivity hypothesis in schizophrenia. The results extend on previous studies by characterizing scale-free properties of deep brain structures and applying advanced non-linear metrics that are underused in the field of psychiatry. The results of this thesis contribute significantly to the identification of novel biomarkers in schizophrenia and show the importance of clarifying the temporal properties of altered intrinsic neural dynamics. Moreover, the presented studies offer a methodological framework that can be extended to other psychopathologies, such as depression

    Can biological quantum networks solve NP-hard problems?

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    There is a widespread view that the human brain is so complex that it cannot be efficiently simulated by universal Turing machines. During the last decades the question has therefore been raised whether we need to consider quantum effects to explain the imagined cognitive power of a conscious mind. This paper presents a personal view of several fields of philosophy and computational neurobiology in an attempt to suggest a realistic picture of how the brain might work as a basis for perception, consciousness and cognition. The purpose is to be able to identify and evaluate instances where quantum effects might play a significant role in cognitive processes. Not surprisingly, the conclusion is that quantum-enhanced cognition and intelligence are very unlikely to be found in biological brains. Quantum effects may certainly influence the functionality of various components and signalling pathways at the molecular level in the brain network, like ion ports, synapses, sensors, and enzymes. This might evidently influence the functionality of some nodes and perhaps even the overall intelligence of the brain network, but hardly give it any dramatically enhanced functionality. So, the conclusion is that biological quantum networks can only approximately solve small instances of NP-hard problems. On the other hand, artificial intelligence and machine learning implemented in complex dynamical systems based on genuine quantum networks can certainly be expected to show enhanced performance and quantum advantage compared with classical networks. Nevertheless, even quantum networks can only be expected to efficiently solve NP-hard problems approximately. In the end it is a question of precision - Nature is approximate.Comment: 38 page

    On the use of pairwise distance learning for brain signal classification with limited observations

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    The increasing access to brain signal data using electroencephalography creates new opportunities to study electrophysiological brain activity and perform ambulatory diagnoses of neurological disorders. This work proposes a pairwise distance learning approach for schizophrenia classification relying on the spectral properties of the signal. To be able to handle clinical trials with a limited number of observations (i.e. case and/or control individuals), we propose a Siamese neural network architecture to learn a discriminative feature space from pairwise combinations of observations per channel. In this way, the multivariate order of the signal is used as a form of data augmentation, further supporting the network generalization ability. Convolutional layers with parameters learned under a cosine contrastive loss are proposed to adequately explore spectral images derived from the brain signal. The proposed approach for schizophrenia diagnostic was tested on reference clinical trial data under resting-state protocol, achieving 0.95 ± 0.05 accuracy, 0.98 ± 0.02 sensitivity and 0.92 ± 0.07 specificity. Results show that the features extracted using the proposed neural network are remarkably superior than baselines to diagnose schizophrenia (+20pp in accuracy and sensitivity), suggesting the existence of non-trivial electrophysiological brain patterns able to capture discriminative neuroplasticity profiles among individuals. The code is available on Github: https://github.com/DCalhas/siamese_schizophrenia_eeg.Peer ReviewedPostprint (author's final draft
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