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Explainable Multimodal Deep Dictionary Learning to Capture Developmental Differences from Three fMRI Paradigms

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posted on 2023-03-08, 10:00 authored by L Yang, C Qiao, Huiyu Zhou, VD Calhoun, JM Stephen, TW Wilson, Y Wang

Objective : Multimodal-based methods show great potential for neuroscience studies by integrating complementary information. There has been less multimodal work focussed on brain developmental changes. Methods : We propose an explainable multimodal deep dictionary learning method to uncover both the commonality and specificity of different modalities, which learns the shared dictionary and the modality-specific sparse representations based on the multimodal data and their encodings of a sparse deep autoencoder. Results : By regarding three fMRI paradigms collected during two tasks and resting state as modalities, we apply the proposed method on multimodal data to identify the brain developmental differences. The results show that the proposed model can not only achieve better performance in reconstruction, but also yield age-related differences in reoccurring patterns. Specifically, both children and young adults prefer to switch among states during two tasks while staying within a particular state during rest, but the difference is that children possess more diffuse functional connectivity patterns while young adults have more focused functional connectivity patterns. Conclusion and Significance : To uncover the commonality and specificity of three fMRI paradigms to developmental differences, multimodal data and their encodings are used to train the shared dictionary and the modality-specific sparse representations. Identifying brain network differences helps to understand how the neural circuits and brain networks form and develop with age. 

Funding

National Natural Science Foundation of China (Grant Number: 12090021 and 12271429)

National Key Research and Development Program of China (Grant Number: 2020AAA0106302)

Natural Science Basic Research Program of Shaanxi (Grant Number: 2022JM-005)

National Institutes of Health (Grant Number: R01 MH104680, R01 GM109068, R01 MH121101, R01 MH116782, R01 MH118013 and P20-GM144641)

History

Author affiliation

School of Computing and Mathematical Sciences, University of Leicester

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Published in

IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering

Publisher

Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers

issn

0018-9294

Copyright date

2023

Available date

2023-03-08

Language

en

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