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Low-rank plus sparse decomposition of fMRI data with application to Alzheimer's disease

Faculty Advisor

Date

2022

Keywords

functional connectivity, rsfMRI = resting-state fMRI, low rank plus sparse decomposition (LRSD), Alzheimer’s disease, ADNI

Abstract (summary)

Studying functional brain connectivity plays an important role in understanding how human brain functions and neuropsychological diseases such as autism, attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder, and Alzheimer's disease (AD). Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) is one of the most popularly used tool to construct functional brain connectivity. However, the presence of noises and outliers in fMRI blood oxygen level dependent (BOLD) signals might lead to unreliable and unstable results in the construction of connectivity matrix. In this paper, we propose a pipeline that enables us to estimate robust and stable connectivity matrix, which increases the detectability of group differences. In particular, a low-rank plus sparse (L + S) matrix decomposition technique is adopted to decompose the original signals, where the low-rank matrix L recovers the essential common features from regions of interest, and the sparse matrix S catches the sparse individual variability and potential outliers. On the basis of decomposed signals, we construct connectivity matrix using the proposed novel concentration inequality-based sparse estimator. In order to facilitate the comparisons, we also consider correlation, partial correlation, and graphical Lasso-based methods. Hypothesis testing is then conducted to detect group differences. The proposed pipeline is applied to rs-fMRI data in Alzheimer's disease neuroimaging initiative to detect AD-related biomarkers, and we show that the proposed pipeline provides accurate yet more stable results than using the original BOLD signals.

Publication Information

Tu, W., Fu, F., Kong, L., Jiang, B., Cobzas, D. and Huang, C. (2022). Low-Rank Plus Sparse Decomposition of fMRI Data With Application to Alzheimer's Disease. Frontiers in Neuroscience 16:826316. doi: 10.3389/fnins.2022.826316

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Item Type

Article

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Rights

Attribution (CC BY)