1,471 research outputs found
Tensor Analysis and Fusion of Multimodal Brain Images
Current high-throughput data acquisition technologies probe dynamical systems
with different imaging modalities, generating massive data sets at different
spatial and temporal resolutions posing challenging problems in multimodal data
fusion. A case in point is the attempt to parse out the brain structures and
networks that underpin human cognitive processes by analysis of different
neuroimaging modalities (functional MRI, EEG, NIRS etc.). We emphasize that the
multimodal, multi-scale nature of neuroimaging data is well reflected by a
multi-way (tensor) structure where the underlying processes can be summarized
by a relatively small number of components or "atoms". We introduce
Markov-Penrose diagrams - an integration of Bayesian DAG and tensor network
notation in order to analyze these models. These diagrams not only clarify
matrix and tensor EEG and fMRI time/frequency analysis and inverse problems,
but also help understand multimodal fusion via Multiway Partial Least Squares
and Coupled Matrix-Tensor Factorization. We show here, for the first time, that
Granger causal analysis of brain networks is a tensor regression problem, thus
allowing the atomic decomposition of brain networks. Analysis of EEG and fMRI
recordings shows the potential of the methods and suggests their use in other
scientific domains.Comment: 23 pages, 15 figures, submitted to Proceedings of the IEE
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
An Independent Component Analysis Based Tool for Exploring Functional Connections in the Brain
This thesis describes the use of independent component analysis (ICA) as
a measure of voxel similarity, which allows the user to find and view
statistically independent maps of correlated voxel activity.
The tool developed in this work uses a specialized clustering technique,
designed to find and characterize clusters of activated voxels, to
compare the independent component spatial maps across patients. This
same method is also used to compare SPM results across patients
Markov models for fMRI correlation structure: is brain functional connectivity small world, or decomposable into networks?
Correlations in the signal observed via functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging
(fMRI), are expected to reveal the interactions in the underlying neural
populations through hemodynamic response. In particular, they highlight
distributed set of mutually correlated regions that correspond to brain
networks related to different cognitive functions. Yet graph-theoretical
studies of neural connections give a different picture: that of a highly
integrated system with small-world properties: local clustering but with short
pathways across the complete structure. We examine the conditional independence
properties of the fMRI signal, i.e. its Markov structure, to find realistic
assumptions on the connectivity structure that are required to explain the
observed functional connectivity. In particular we seek a decomposition of the
Markov structure into segregated functional networks using decomposable graphs:
a set of strongly-connected and partially overlapping cliques. We introduce a
new method to efficiently extract such cliques on a large, strongly-connected
graph. We compare methods learning different graph structures from functional
connectivity by testing the goodness of fit of the model they learn on new
data. We find that summarizing the structure as strongly-connected networks can
give a good description only for very large and overlapping networks. These
results highlight that Markov models are good tools to identify the structure
of brain connectivity from fMRI signals, but for this purpose they must reflect
the small-world properties of the underlying neural systems
Towards a Multi-Subject Analysis of Neural Connectivity
Directed acyclic graphs (DAGs) and associated probability models are widely
used to model neural connectivity and communication channels. In many
experiments, data are collected from multiple subjects whose connectivities may
differ but are likely to share many features. In such circumstances it is
natural to leverage similarity between subjects to improve statistical
efficiency. The first exact algorithm for estimation of multiple related DAGs
was recently proposed by Oates et al. 2014; in this letter we present examples
and discuss implications of the methodology as applied to the analysis of fMRI
data from a multi-subject experiment. Elicitation of tuning parameters requires
care and we illustrate how this may proceed retrospectively based on technical
replicate data. In addition to joint learning of subject-specific connectivity,
we allow for heterogeneous collections of subjects and simultaneously estimate
relationships between the subjects themselves. This letter aims to highlight
the potential for exact estimation in the multi-subject setting.Comment: to appear in Neural Computation 27:1-2
Disentangling causal webs in the brain using functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging: A review of current approaches
In the past two decades, functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging has been used
to relate neuronal network activity to cognitive processing and behaviour.
Recently this approach has been augmented by algorithms that allow us to infer
causal links between component populations of neuronal networks. Multiple
inference procedures have been proposed to approach this research question but
so far, each method has limitations when it comes to establishing whole-brain
connectivity patterns. In this work, we discuss eight ways to infer causality
in fMRI research: Bayesian Nets, Dynamical Causal Modelling, Granger Causality,
Likelihood Ratios, LiNGAM, Patel's Tau, Structural Equation Modelling, and
Transfer Entropy. We finish with formulating some recommendations for the
future directions in this area
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