6,729 research outputs found
Hierarchical Multi-resolution Mesh Networks for Brain Decoding
We propose a new framework, called Hierarchical Multi-resolution Mesh
Networks (HMMNs), which establishes a set of brain networks at multiple time
resolutions of fMRI signal to represent the underlying cognitive process. The
suggested framework, first, decomposes the fMRI signal into various frequency
subbands using wavelet transforms. Then, a brain network, called mesh network,
is formed at each subband by ensembling a set of local meshes. The locality
around each anatomic region is defined with respect to a neighborhood system
based on functional connectivity. The arc weights of a mesh are estimated by
ridge regression formed among the average region time series. In the final
step, the adjacency matrices of mesh networks obtained at different subbands
are ensembled for brain decoding under a hierarchical learning architecture,
called, fuzzy stacked generalization (FSG). Our results on Human Connectome
Project task-fMRI dataset reflect that the suggested HMMN model can
successfully discriminate tasks by extracting complementary information
obtained from mesh arc weights of multiple subbands. We study the topological
properties of the mesh networks at different resolutions using the network
measures, namely, node degree, node strength, betweenness centrality and global
efficiency; and investigate the connectivity of anatomic regions, during a
cognitive task. We observe significant variations among the network topologies
obtained for different subbands. We, also, analyze the diversity properties of
classifier ensemble, trained by the mesh networks in multiple subbands and
observe that the classifiers in the ensemble collaborate with each other to
fuse the complementary information freed at each subband. We conclude that the
fMRI data, recorded during a cognitive task, embed diverse information across
the anatomic regions at each resolution.Comment: 18 page
Social-sparsity brain decoders: faster spatial sparsity
Spatially-sparse predictors are good models for brain decoding: they give
accurate predictions and their weight maps are interpretable as they focus on a
small number of regions. However, the state of the art, based on total
variation or graph-net, is computationally costly. Here we introduce sparsity
in the local neighborhood of each voxel with social-sparsity, a structured
shrinkage operator. We find that, on brain imaging classification problems,
social-sparsity performs almost as well as total-variation models and better
than graph-net, for a fraction of the computational cost. It also very clearly
outlines predictive regions. We give details of the model and the algorithm.Comment: in Pattern Recognition in NeuroImaging, Jun 2016, Trento, Italy. 201
Learning and comparing functional connectomes across subjects
Functional connectomes capture brain interactions via synchronized
fluctuations in the functional magnetic resonance imaging signal. If measured
during rest, they map the intrinsic functional architecture of the brain. With
task-driven experiments they represent integration mechanisms between
specialized brain areas. Analyzing their variability across subjects and
conditions can reveal markers of brain pathologies and mechanisms underlying
cognition. Methods of estimating functional connectomes from the imaging signal
have undergone rapid developments and the literature is full of diverse
strategies for comparing them. This review aims to clarify links across
functional-connectivity methods as well as to expose different steps to perform
a group study of functional connectomes
Distance Metric Learning using Graph Convolutional Networks: Application to Functional Brain Networks
Evaluating similarity between graphs is of major importance in several
computer vision and pattern recognition problems, where graph representations
are often used to model objects or interactions between elements. The choice of
a distance or similarity metric is, however, not trivial and can be highly
dependent on the application at hand. In this work, we propose a novel metric
learning method to evaluate distance between graphs that leverages the power of
convolutional neural networks, while exploiting concepts from spectral graph
theory to allow these operations on irregular graphs. We demonstrate the
potential of our method in the field of connectomics, where neuronal pathways
or functional connections between brain regions are commonly modelled as
graphs. In this problem, the definition of an appropriate graph similarity
function is critical to unveil patterns of disruptions associated with certain
brain disorders. Experimental results on the ABIDE dataset show that our method
can learn a graph similarity metric tailored for a clinical application,
improving the performance of a simple k-nn classifier by 11.9% compared to a
traditional distance metric.Comment: International Conference on Medical Image Computing and
Computer-Assisted Interventions (MICCAI) 201
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