Predicting sex, age, general cognition and mental health with machine learning on brain structural connectomes
Yeung, Hon Wah and Stolicyn, Aleks and Buchanan, Colin R. and Tucker-Drob, Elliot M. and Bastin, Mark E. and Luz, Saturnino and McIntosh, Andrew M. and Whalley, Heather C. and Cox, Simon R. and Smith, Keith (2023) Predicting sex, age, general cognition and mental health with machine learning on brain structural connectomes. Human Brain Mapping, 44 (5). pp. 1913-1933. ISSN 1065-9471 (https://doi.org/10.1002/hbm.26182)
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Abstract
There is an increasing expectation that advanced, computationally expensive machine learning (ML) techniques, when applied to large population-wide neuroimaging datasets, will help to uncover key differences in the human brain in health and disease. We take a comprehensive approach to explore how multiple aspects of brain structural connectivity can predict sex, age, general cognitive function and general psychopathology, testing different ML algorithms from deep learning (DL) model (BrainNetCNN) to classical ML methods. We modelled N = 8183 structural connectomes from UK Biobank using six different structural network weightings obtained from diffusion MRI. Streamline count generally provided the highest prediction accuracies in all prediction tasks. DL did not improve on prediction accuracies from simpler linear models. Further, high correlations between gradient attribution coefficients from DL and model coefficients from linear models suggested the models ranked the importance of features in similar ways, which indirectly suggested the similarity in models' strategies for making predictive decision to some extent. This highlights that model complexity is unlikely to improve detection of associations between structural connectomes and complex phenotypes with the current sample size.
ORCID iDs
Yeung, Hon Wah, Stolicyn, Aleks, Buchanan, Colin R., Tucker-Drob, Elliot M., Bastin, Mark E., Luz, Saturnino, McIntosh, Andrew M., Whalley, Heather C., Cox, Simon R. and Smith, Keith ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4615-9020;-
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Item type: Article ID code: 87243 Dates: DateEvent1 April 2023Published21 December 2022Published Online30 November 2022Accepted11 March 2022SubmittedSubjects: Science > Mathematics > Electronic computers. Computer science
Medicine > Internal medicine > Neuroscience. Biological psychiatry. NeuropsychiatryDepartment: Faculty of Science > Computer and Information Sciences Depositing user: Pure Administrator Date deposited: 08 Nov 2023 16:25 Last modified: 13 Nov 2024 21:25 URI: https://strathprints.strath.ac.uk/id/eprint/87243