1. Discriminative Sparse Features for Alzheimer's Disease Diagnosis Using Multimodal Image Data.
- Author
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Ortiz A, Lozano F, Gorriz JM, Ramirez J, and Martinez Murcia FJ
- Subjects
- Aged, Brain diagnostic imaging, Female, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Male, Neuroimaging, Pattern Recognition, Automated methods, Positron-Emission Tomography methods, Support Vector Machine, Alzheimer Disease diagnostic imaging, Cognitive Dysfunction diagnostic imaging, Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted methods, Multimodal Imaging
- Abstract
Background: Feature extraction in medical image processing still remains a challenge, especially in high-dimensionality datasets, where the expected number of available samples is considerably lower than the dimension of the feature space. This is a common problem in real-world data, and, specifically, in medical image pro- cessing as, while images are composed of hundreds of thousands voxels, only a reduced number of patients are available., Objective: Extracting descriptive and discriminative features to represent each sample (image) by a small number of features, which is particularly important in classification task, due to the curse of dimensionality problem., Methods: In this paper we solve this recognition problem by means of sparse representations of the data, which also provides an arena to multimodal image (PET and MRI) data classification by combining specialized classifiers. Thus, a novel method to effectively combine SVC classifiers is presented here, which uses the distance to the hyperplane computed for each class in each classifier allowing to select the most discriminative image modality in each case. The discriminative power of each modality also provides information about the illness evolution; while functional changes are clearly found in Alzheimer's diagnosed patients (AD) when compared to control subjects (CN), structural changes seem to be more relevant at the early stages of the illness, affecting Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI) patients., Results: Classification experiments using 68 CN, 70 AD and 111 MCI images from the Alzheimer's Disease Neuroimaging Initiative database have been performed and assessed by cross-validation to show the effectiveness of the proposed method. Accuracy values of up to 92% and 84% for CN/AD and CN/MCI classification are achieved., Conclusions: The method presented in this work shows that sparse representations of brain images are of importance for codifying and transferring relevant image features, as they may capture the salient features while maintaining lightweight data transactions. In fact, the method proposed in this work outperforms the classification results obtained using projection methods such as Principal Component Analysis for extracting representative features of the images., (Copyright© Bentham Science Publishers; For any queries, please email at epub@benthamscience.org.)
- Published
- 2018
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