Subject-Specific Abnormal Region Detection in Traumatic Brain Injury Using Sparse Model Selection on High Dimensional Diffusion Data

Medical Image Analysis 37 (2017) 56-65 We present a method to estimate a multivariate Gaussian distribution of diffusion tensor features in a set of brain regions based on a small sample of healthy individuals, and use this distribution to identify imaging abnormalities in subjects with mild traumat...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors Shaker, Matineh, Erdogmus, Deniz, Dy, Jennifer, Bouix, Sylvain
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published 21.04.2017
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Online AccessGet full text
DOI10.48550/arxiv.1704.06408

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Summary:Medical Image Analysis 37 (2017) 56-65 We present a method to estimate a multivariate Gaussian distribution of diffusion tensor features in a set of brain regions based on a small sample of healthy individuals, and use this distribution to identify imaging abnormalities in subjects with mild traumatic brain injury. The multivariate model receives a {\em apriori} knowledge in the form of a neighborhood graph imposed on the precision matrix, which models brain region interactions, and an additional $L_1$ sparsity constraint. The model is then estimated using the graphical LASSO algorithm and the Mahalanobis distance of healthy and TBI subjects to the distribution mean is used to evaluate the discriminatory power of the model. Our experiments show that the addition of the {\em apriori} neighborhood graph results in significant improvements in classification performance compared to a model which does not take into account the brain region interactions or one which uses a fully connected prior graph. In addition, we describe a method, using our model, to detect the regions that contribute the most to the overall abnormality of the DTI profile of a subject's brain.
DOI:10.48550/arxiv.1704.06408