15 research outputs found
Frameworks to Investigate Robustness and Disease Characterization/Prediction Utility of Time-Varying Functional Connectivity State Profiles of the Human Brain at Rest
Neuroimaging technologies aim at delineating the highly complex structural and functional organization of the human brain. In recent years, several unimodal as well as multimodal analyses of structural MRI (sMRI) and functional MRI (fMRI) neuroimaging modalities, leveraging advanced signal processing and machine learning based feature extraction algorithms, have opened new avenues in diagnosis of complex brain syndromes and neurocognitive disorders. Generically regarding these neuroimaging modalities as filtered, complimentary insights of brain’s anatomical and functional organization, multimodal data fusion efforts could enable more comprehensive mapping of brain structure and function.
Large scale functional organization of the brain is often studied by viewing the brain as a complex, integrative network composed of spatially distributed, but functionally interacting, sub-networks that continually share and process information. Such whole-brain functional interactions, also referred to as patterns of functional connectivity (FC), are typically examined as levels of synchronous co-activation in the different functional networks of the brain. More recently, there has been a major paradigm shift from measuring the whole-brain FC in an oversimplified, time-averaged manner to additional exploration of time-varying mechanisms to identify the recurring, transient brain configurations or brain states, referred to as time-varying FC state profiles in this dissertation. Notably, prior studies based on time-varying FC approaches have made use of these relatively lower dimensional fMRI features to characterize pathophysiology and have also been reported to relate to demographic characterization, consciousness levels and cognition.
In this dissertation, we corroborate the efficacy of time-varying FC state profiles of the human brain at rest by implementing statistical frameworks to evaluate their robustness and statistical significance through an in-depth, novel evaluation on multiple, independent partitions of a very large rest-fMRI dataset, as well as extensive validation testing on surrogate rest-fMRI datasets. In the following, we present a novel data-driven, blind source separation based multimodal (sMRI-fMRI) data fusion framework that uses the time-varying FC state profiles as features from the fMRI modality to characterize diseased brain conditions and substantiate brain structure-function relationships. Finally, we present a novel data-driven, deep learning based multimodal (sMRI-fMRI) data fusion framework that examines the degree of diagnostic and prognostic performance improvement based on time-varying FC state profiles as features from the fMRI modality. The approaches developed and tested in this dissertation evince high levels of robustness and highlight the utility of time-varying FC state profiles as potential biomarkers to characterize, diagnose and predict diseased brain conditions. As such, the findings in this work argue in favor of the view of FC investigations of the brain that are centered on time-varying FC approaches, and also highlight the benefits of combining multiple neuroimaging data modalities via data fusion
Introduction to Communication Systems Using National Instruments Universal Software Peripheral Radio Lab Manual
The students at the University of New Mexico Electrical and Computer Engineering Department are planning to use an integrated set of lectures and labs to better understand basic communications systems. The lectures are based on the textbook by Ziemer and Tranter, Principles of Communications - Systems, Modulation, and Noise. The labs are developed using the National Instruments Universal Software Radio Peripheral (USRP). The choice of this radio provides 2 advantages from an instructional perspective: it minimizes the amount of lab equipment necessary for performing the labs, and its range of flexibility to support spectrum sensing, cognitive radio and alternate modulation schemes.
(Párrafo extraído del texto a modo de resumen)Ibero-American Science and Technology Education Consortium (ISTEC
Introduction to Communication Systems Using National Instruments Universal Software Peripheral Radio Lab Manual
The students at the University of New Mexico Electrical and Computer Engineering Department are planning to use an integrated set of lectures and labs to better understand basic communications systems. The lectures are based on the textbook by Ziemer and Tranter, Principles of Communications - Systems, Modulation, and Noise. The labs are developed using the National Instruments Universal Software Radio Peripheral (USRP). The choice of this radio provides 2 advantages from an instructional perspective: it minimizes the amount of lab equipment necessary for performing the labs, and its range of flexibility to support spectrum sensing, cognitive radio and alternate modulation schemes.
(Párrafo extraído del texto a modo de resumen)Ibero-American Science and Technology Education Consortium (ISTEC
Prediction of Gender from Longitudinal MRI data via Deep Learning on Adolescent Data Reveals Unique Patterns Associated with Brain Structure and Change over a Two-year Period
Deep learning algorithms for predicting neuroimaging data have shown
considerable promise in various applications. Prior work has demonstrated that
deep learning models that take advantage of the data's 3D structure can
outperform standard machine learning on several learning tasks. However, most
prior research in this area has focused on neuroimaging data from adults.
Within the Adolescent Brain and Cognitive Development (ABCD) dataset, a large
longitudinal development study, we examine structural MRI data to predict
gender and identify gender-related changes in brain structure. Results
demonstrate that gender prediction accuracy is exceptionally high (>97%) with
training epochs >200 and that this accuracy increases with age. Brain regions
identified as the most discriminative in the task under study include
predominantly frontal areas and the temporal lobe. When evaluating gender
predictive changes specific to a two-year increase in age, a broader set of
visual, cingulate, and insular regions are revealed. Our findings show a robust
gender-related structural brain change pattern, even over a small age range.
This suggests that it might be possible to study how the brain changes during
adolescence by looking at how these changes are related to different behavioral
and environmental factors
Pipeline-Invariant Representation Learning for Neuroimaging
Deep learning has been widely applied in neuroimaging, including predicting
brain-phenotype relationships from magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) volumes.
MRI data usually requires extensive preprocessing prior to modeling, but
variation introduced by different MRI preprocessing pipelines may lead to
different scientific findings, even when using the identical data. Motivated by
the data-centric perspective, we first evaluate how preprocessing pipeline
selection can impact the downstream performance of a supervised learning model.
We next propose two pipeline-invariant representation learning methodologies,
MPSL and PXL, to improve robustness in classification performance and to
capture similar neural network representations. Using 2000 human subjects from
the UK Biobank dataset, we demonstrate that proposed models present unique and
shared advantages, in particular that MPSL can be used to improve out-of-sample
generalization to new pipelines, while PXL can be used to improve within-sample
prediction performance. Both MPSL and PXL can learn more similar
between-pipeline representations. These results suggest that our proposed
models can be applied to mitigate pipeline-related biases, and to improve
prediction robustness in brain-phenotype modeling.Comment: Extended Abstract presented at Machine Learning for Health (ML4H)
symposium 2022, November 28th, 2022, New Orleans, United States & Virtual,
http://www.ml4h.cc, 17 page
Schizophrenia Shows Disrupted Links between Brain Volume and Dynamic Functional Connectivity
Studies featuring multimodal neuroimaging data fusion for understanding brain function and structure, or disease characterization, leverage the partial information available in each of the modalities to reveal data variations not exhibited through the independent analyses. Similar to other complex syndromes, the characteristic brain abnormalities in schizophrenia may be better understood with the help of the additional information conveyed by leveraging an advanced modeling method involving multiple modalities. In this study, we propose a novel framework to fuse feature spaces corresponding to functional magnetic resonance imaging (functional) and gray matter (structural) data from 151 schizophrenia patients and 163 healthy controls. In particular, the features for the functional and structural modalities include dynamic (i.e., time-varying) functional network connectivity (dFNC) maps and the intensities of the gray matter (GM) maps, respectively. The dFNC maps are estimated from group independent component analysis (ICA) network time-courses by first computing windowed functional correlations using a sliding window approach, and then estimating subject specific states from this windowed data using temporal ICA followed by spatio-temporal regression. For each subject, the functional data features are horizontally concatenated with the corresponding GM features to form a combined feature space that is subsequently decomposed through a symmetric multimodal fusion approach involving a combination of multiset canonical correlation analysis (mCCA) and joint ICA (jICA). Our novel combined analyses successfully linked changes in the two modalities and revealed significantly disrupted links between GM volumes and time-varying functional connectivity in schizophrenia. Consistent with prior research, we found significant group differences in GM comprising regions in the superior parietal lobule, precuneus, postcentral gyrus, medial/superior frontal gyrus, superior/middle temporal gyrus, insula and fusiform gyrus, and several significant aberrations in the inter-regional functional connectivity strength as well. Importantly, structural and dFNC measures have independently shown changes associated with schizophrenia, and in this work we begin the process of evaluating the links between the two, which could shed light on the illness beyond what we can learn from a single imaging modality. In future work, we plan to evaluate replication of the inferred structure-function relationships in independent partitions of larger multi-modal schizophrenia datasets