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Learning Robust Hierarchical Patterns of Human Brain across Many fMRI Studies

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Resting-state fMRI has been shown to provide surrogate biomarkers for the analysis of various diseases. In addition, fMRI data helps in understanding the brain's functional working during resting state and task-induced activity. To improve the statistical power of biomarkers and the understanding mechanism of the brain, pooling of multi-center studies has become increasingly popular. But pooling the data from multiple sites introduces variations due to hardware, software, and environment. In this paper, we look at the estimation problem of hierarchical Sparsity Connectivity Patterns (hSCPs) in fMRI data acquired on multiple sites. We introduce a simple yet effective matrix factorization based formulation to reduce site-related effects while preserving biologically relevant variations. We leverage adversarial learning in the unsupervised regime to improve the reproducibility of the components. Experiments on simulated datasets display that the proposed method can estimate components with improved accuracy and reproducibility. We also demonstrate the improved reproducibility of the components while preserving age-related variation on a real dataset compiled from multiple sites.

Dushyant Sahoo, Christos Davatzikos• 2021

Related benchmarks

TaskDatasetResultRank
Accuracy of componentsHierarchical simulated dataset (test)
Accuracy90.9
40
ReproducibilityReal fMRI dataset (split-sample)
Reproducibility0.808
40
Component estimationSimulated dataset one level
Accuracy91
28
ReproducibilitySimulated dataset k2 = 4
Reproducibility86.1
20
ReproducibilitySimulated dataset k2=6
Reproducibility85.1
20
Reproducibility Assessmentreal fMRI dataset (leave-one-site-out)
Reproducibility Score71.6
20
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