Structural MRI and PET imaging play an important role in the diagnosis of Alzheimer's disease (AD), showing the morphological changes and glucose metabolism changes in the brain respectively. The manifestations in the brain image of some cognitive impairment patients are relatively inconspicuous, for example, it still has difficulties in achieving accurate diagnosis through sMRI in clinical practice. With the emergence of deep learning, convolutional neural network (CNN) has become a valuable method in AD-aided diagnosis, but some CNN methods cannot effectively learn the features of brain image, making the diagnosis of AD still presents some challenges. In this work, we propose an end-to-end 3D CNN framework for AD diagnosis based on ResNet, which integrates multi-layer features obtained under the effect of the attention mechanism to better capture subtle differences in brain images. The attention maps showed our model can focus on key brain regions related to the disease diagnosis. Our method was verified in ablation experiments with two modality images on 792 subjects from the ADNI database, where AD diagnostic accuracies of 89.71% and 91.18% were achieved based on sMRI and PET respectively, and also outperformed some state-of-the-art methods.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/EMBC40787.2023.10340536 | DOI Listing |
J Chem Inf Model
January 2025
School of Cyberspace Security, Hainan University, Haikou 570228, China.
As an increasing number of microRNAs (miRNAs) have become biomarkers of various human diseases, prediction of the candidate disease-related miRNAs is helpful for facilitating the early diagnosis of diseases. Most of the recent prediction models concentrated on learning of the features from the heterogeneous graph composed of miRNAs and diseases. However, they failed to fully exploit the subgraph structures consisting of multiple miRNA and disease nodes, and they also did not completely integrate the context relationships among the pairwise features.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSensors (Basel)
January 2025
College of Geoexploration Science and Technology, Jilin University, Changchun 130012, China.
As gravity exploration technology advances, gravity gradient measurement is becoming an increasingly important method for gravity detection. Airborne gravity gradient measurement is widely used in fields such as resource exploration, mineral detection, and oil and gas exploration. However, the motion and attitude changes of the aircraft can significantly affect the measurement results.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSensors (Basel)
January 2025
Department of Software Convergence, Soonchunhyang University, Asan 31538, Republic of Korea.
The Transformer model has received significant attention in Human Activity Recognition (HAR) due to its self-attention mechanism that captures long dependencies in time series. However, for Inertial Measurement Unit (IMU) sensor time-series signals, the Transformer model does not effectively utilize the a priori information of strong complex temporal correlations. Therefore, we proposed using multi-layer convolutional layers as a Convolutional Feature Extractor Block (CFEB).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCancers (Basel)
January 2025
BC Cancer Research Institute, Vancouver, BC V5Z 1L3, Canada.
Objective: This study explores a semi-supervised learning (SSL), pseudo-labeled strategy using diverse datasets such as head and neck cancer (HNCa) to enhance lung cancer (LCa) survival outcome predictions, analyzing handcrafted and deep radiomic features (HRF/DRF) from PET/CT scans with hybrid machine learning systems (HMLSs).
Methods: We collected 199 LCa patients with both PET and CT images, obtained from TCIA and our local database, alongside 408 HNCa PET/CT images from TCIA. We extracted 215 HRFs and 1024 DRFs by PySERA and a 3D autoencoder, respectively, within the ViSERA 1.
Diagnostics (Basel)
January 2025
LR18-SP08 Department of Radiology, University Hospital of Monastir, Monastir 5019, Tunisia.
To develop a computer-aided diagnosis (CAD) method for the classification of late gadolinium enhancement (LGE) cardiac MRI images into myocardial infarction (MI), myocarditis, and healthy classes using a fine-tuned VGG16 model hybridized with multi-layer perceptron (MLP) (VGG16-MLP) and assess our model's performance in comparison to various pre-trained base models and MRI readers. This study included 361 LGE images for MI, 222 for myocarditis, and 254 for the healthy class. The left ventricle was extracted automatically using a U-net segmentation model on LGE images.
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