2 research outputs found
Differentiable VQ-VAE's for Robust White Matter Streamline Encodings
Given the complex geometry of white matter streamlines, Autoencoders have
been proposed as a dimension-reduction tool to simplify the analysis
streamlines in a low-dimensional latent spaces. However, despite these recent
successes, the majority of encoder architectures only perform dimension
reduction on single streamlines as opposed to a full bundle of streamlines.
This is a severe limitation of the encoder architecture that completely
disregards the global geometric structure of streamlines at the expense of
individual fibers. Moreover, the latent space may not be well structured which
leads to doubt into their interpretability. In this paper we propose a novel
Differentiable Vector Quantized Variational Autoencoder, which are engineered
to ingest entire bundles of streamlines as single data-point and provides
reliable trustworthy encodings that can then be later used to analyze
streamlines in the latent space. Comparisons with several state of the art
Autoencoders demonstrate superior performance in both encoding and synthesis.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, 1 tabl
White matter microstructural perturbations after total sleep deprivation in depression
BackgroundTotal sleep deprivation (TSD) transiently reverses depressive symptoms in a majority of patients with depression. How TSD modulates diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) measures of white matter (WM) microstructure, which may be linked with TSD’s rapid antidepressant effects, remains uncharacterized.MethodsPatients with depression (N = 48, mean age = 33, 26 women) completed diffusion-weighted imaging and Hamilton Depression Rating (HDRS) and rumination scales before and after >24 h of TSD. Healthy controls (HC) (N = 53, 23 women) completed the same assessments at baseline, and after receiving TSD in a subset of HCs (N = 15). Tract based spatial statistics (TBSS) investigated voxelwise changes in fractional anisotropy (FA) across major WM pathways pre-to-post TSD in patients and HCs and between patients and HCs at baseline. Post hoc analyses tested for TSD effects for other diffusion metrics, and the relationships between change in diffusion measures with change in mood and rumination symptoms.ResultsSignificant improvements in mood and rumination occurred in patients with depression (both p < 0.001), but not in HCs following TSD. Patients showed significant (p < 0.05, corrected) decreases in FA values in multiple WM tracts, including the body of the corpus callosum and anterior corona radiata post-TSD. Significant voxel-level changes in FA were not observed in HCs who received TSD (p > 0.05). However, differential effects of TSD between HCs and patients were found in the superior corona radiata, frontal WM and the posterior thalamic radiation (p < 0.05, corrected). A significant (p < 0.05) association between change in FA and axial diffusivity within the right superior corona radiata and improvement in rumination was found post-TSD in patients.ConclusionTotal sleep deprivation leads to rapid microstructural changes in WM pathways in patients with depression that are distinct from WM changes associated with TSD observed in HCs. WM tracts including the superior corona radiata and posterior thalamic radiation could be potential biomarkers of the rapid therapeutic effects of TSD. Changes in superior corona radiata FA, in particular, may relate to improvements in maladaptive rumination