AI Article Synopsis

  • The paper discusses challenges in diagnosing brain disorders using resting-state fMRI due to complex imaging features and limited sample sizes.
  • It identifies three main limitations in existing graph convolutional network (GCN) approaches: sensitivity to non-imaging data, neglecting feature relationships, and the issues caused by multisite data variability.
  • To address these, the paper proposes a new method called a knowledge-aware multisite adaptive graph Transformer, which evaluates feature sensitivity, fuses subgraphs, and employs a domain adaptive GCN, demonstrating improved diagnostic performance in experiments on brain disorders.

Article Abstract

Brain disorder diagnosis via resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging (rs-fMRI) is usually limited due to the complex imaging features and sample size. For brain disorder diagnosis, the graph convolutional network (GCN) has achieved remarkable success by capturing interactions between individuals and the population. However, there are mainly three limitations: 1) The previous GCN approaches consider the non-imaging information in edge construction but ignore the sensitivity differences of features to non-imaging information. 2) The previous GCN approaches solely focus on establishing interactions between subjects (i.e., individuals and the population), disregarding the essential relationship between features. 3) Multisite data increase the sample size to help classifier training, but the inter-site heterogeneity limits the performance to some extent. This paper proposes a knowledge-aware multisite adaptive graph Transformer to address the above problems. First, we evaluate the sensitivity of features to each piece of non-imaging information, and then construct feature-sensitive and feature-insensitive subgraphs. Second, after fusing the above subgraphs, we integrate a Transformer module to capture the intrinsic relationship between features. Third, we design a domain adaptive GCN using multiple loss function terms to relieve data heterogeneity and to produce the final classification results. Last, the proposed framework is validated on two brain disorder diagnostic tasks. Experimental results show that the proposed framework can achieve state-of-the-art performance.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/TMI.2024.3453419DOI Listing

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