Centered kernel alignment enhancing neural network pretraining for MRI-based dementia diagnosis (Q332961)
From MaRDI portal
scientific article
Language | Label | Description | Also known as |
---|---|---|---|
English | Centered kernel alignment enhancing neural network pretraining for MRI-based dementia diagnosis |
scientific article |
Statements
Centered kernel alignment enhancing neural network pretraining for MRI-based dementia diagnosis (English)
0 references
9 November 2016
0 references
Summary: Dementia is a growing problem that affects elderly people worldwide. More accurate evaluation of dementia diagnosis can help during the medical examination. Several methods for computer-aided dementia diagnosis have been proposed using resonance imaging scans to discriminate between patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD) or mild cognitive impairment (MCI) and healthy controls (NC). Nonetheless, the computer-aided diagnosis is especially challenging because of the heterogeneous and intermediate nature of MCI. We address the automated dementia diagnosis by introducing a novel supervised pretraining approach that takes advantage of the artificial neural network (ANN) for complex classification tasks. The proposal initializes an ANN based on linear projections to achieve more discriminating spaces. Such projections are estimated by maximizing the centered kernel alignment criterion that assesses the affinity between the resonance imaging data kernel matrix and the label target matrix. As a result, the performed linear embedding allows accounting for features that contribute the most to the MCI class discrimination. We compare the supervised pretraining approach to two unsupervised initialization methods (autoencoders and principal component analysis) and against the best four performing classification methods of the 2014 \textit{CADDementia} challenge. As a result, our proposal outperforms all the baselines (7\% of classification accuracy and area under the receiver-operating-characteristic curve) at the time it reduces the class biasing.
0 references
Alzheimer's disease
0 references
mild cognitive impairment
0 references
resonance imaging scans
0 references
artificial neural network
0 references