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1.
Environ Resour Econ (Dordr) ; 80(4): 675-704, 2021.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34566260

RESUMEN

We estimate the U.S. temperature response profile (TRP) for COVID-19 and show it is highly sensitive to temperature variation. Replacing the erratic daily death counts U.S. states initially reported with counts based on death certificate date, we build a week-ahead statistical forecasting model that explains most of their daily variation (R2 = 0.97) and isolates COVID-19's TRP (p < 0.001). These counts, normalized at 31 °C (U.S. mid-summer average), scale up to 160% at 5 °C in the static case where the infection pool is held constant. Positive case counts are substantially more temperature sensitive. When temperatures are declining, dynamic feedback through a growing infection pool can substantially amplify these temperature effects. Our estimated TRP can be incorporated into COVID-related planning exercises and used as an input to SEIR models employed for longer run forecasting. For the former, we show how our TRP is predictive of the realized pattern of growth rates in per capita positive cases across states five months after the end of our sample period. For the latter, we show the variation in herd immunity levels implied by temperature-driven, time-varying R0 series for the Alpha and Delta variants of COVID-19 for several representative states. SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s10640-021-00603-8.

2.
Neuroimage ; 221: 117128, 2020 11 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32673745

RESUMEN

Cross-scanner and cross-protocol variability of diffusion magnetic resonance imaging (dMRI) data are known to be major obstacles in multi-site clinical studies since they limit the ability to aggregate dMRI data and derived measures. Computational algorithms that harmonize the data and minimize such variability are critical to reliably combine datasets acquired from different scanners and/or protocols, thus improving the statistical power and sensitivity of multi-site studies. Different computational approaches have been proposed to harmonize diffusion MRI data or remove scanner-specific differences. To date, these methods have mostly been developed for or evaluated on single b-value diffusion MRI data. In this work, we present the evaluation results of 19 algorithms that are developed to harmonize the cross-scanner and cross-protocol variability of multi-shell diffusion MRI using a benchmark database. The proposed algorithms rely on various signal representation approaches and computational tools, such as rotational invariant spherical harmonics, deep neural networks and hybrid biophysical and statistical approaches. The benchmark database consists of data acquired from the same subjects on two scanners with different maximum gradient strength (80 and 300 â€‹mT/m) and with two protocols. We evaluated the performance of these algorithms for mapping multi-shell diffusion MRI data across scanners and across protocols using several state-of-the-art imaging measures. The results show that data harmonization algorithms can reduce the cross-scanner and cross-protocol variabilities to a similar level as scan-rescan variability using the same scanner and protocol. In particular, the LinearRISH algorithm based on adaptive linear mapping of rotational invariant spherical harmonics features yields the lowest variability for our data in predicting the fractional anisotropy (FA), mean diffusivity (MD), mean kurtosis (MK) and the rotationally invariant spherical harmonic (RISH) features. But other algorithms, such as DIAMOND, SHResNet, DIQT, CMResNet show further improvement in harmonizing the return-to-origin probability (RTOP). The performance of different approaches provides useful guidelines on data harmonization in future multi-site studies.


Asunto(s)
Algoritmos , Encéfalo/diagnóstico por imagen , Aprendizaje Profundo , Imagen de Difusión por Resonancia Magnética/métodos , Procesamiento de Imagen Asistido por Computador/métodos , Neuroimagen/métodos , Adulto , Imagen de Difusión por Resonancia Magnética/instrumentación , Imagen de Difusión por Resonancia Magnética/normas , Humanos , Procesamiento de Imagen Asistido por Computador/normas , Neuroimagen/instrumentación , Neuroimagen/normas , Análisis de Regresión
3.
Magn Reson Med ; 84(4): 2174-2189, 2020 10.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32250475

RESUMEN

PURPOSE: In the present work, we describe the correction of diffusion-weighted MRI for site and scanner biases using a novel method based on invariant representation. THEORY AND METHODS: Pooled imaging data from multiple sources are subject to variation between the sources. Correcting for these biases has become very important as imaging studies increase in size and multi-site cases become more common. We propose learning an intermediate representation invariant to site/protocol variables, a technique adapted from information theory-based algorithmic fairness; by leveraging the data processing inequality, such a representation can then be used to create an image reconstruction that is uninformative of its original source, yet still faithful to underlying structures. To implement this, we use a deep learning method based on variational auto-encoders (VAE) to construct scanner invariant encodings of the imaging data. RESULTS: To evaluate our method, we use training data from the 2018 MICCAI Computational Diffusion MRI (CDMRI) Challenge Harmonization dataset. Our proposed method shows improvements on independent test data relative to a recently published baseline method on each subtask, mapping data from three different scanning contexts to and from one separate target scanning context. CONCLUSIONS: As imaging studies continue to grow, the use of pooled multi-site imaging will similarly increase. Invariant representation presents a strong candidate for the harmonization of these data.


Asunto(s)
Encéfalo , Imagen de Difusión por Resonancia Magnética , Encéfalo/diagnóstico por imagen , Procesamiento de Imagen Asistido por Computador
4.
J Med Imaging (Bellingham) ; 11(2): 024012, 2024 Mar.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38666040

RESUMEN

Purpose: Specular reflections (SRs) are highlight artifacts commonly found in endoscopy videos that can severely disrupt a surgeon's observation and judgment. Despite numerous attempts to restore SR, existing methods are inefficient and time consuming and can lead to false clinical interpretations. Therefore, we propose the first complete deep-learning solution, SpecReFlow, to detect and restore SR regions from endoscopy video with spatial and temporal coherence. Approach: SpecReFlow consists of three stages: (1) an image preprocessing stage to enhance contrast, (2) a detection stage to indicate where the SR region is present, and (3) a restoration stage in which we replace SR pixels with an accurate underlying tissue structure. Our restoration approach uses optical flow to seamlessly propagate color and structure from other frames of the endoscopy video. Results: Comprehensive quantitative and qualitative tests for each stage reveal that our SpecReFlow solution performs better than previous detection and restoration methods. Our detection stage achieves a Dice score of 82.8% and a sensitivity of 94.6%, and our restoration stage successfully incorporates temporal information with spatial information for more accurate restorations than existing techniques. Conclusions: SpecReFlow is a first-of-its-kind solution that combines temporal and spatial information for effective detection and restoration of SR regions, surpassing previous methods relying on single-frame spatial information. Future work will look to optimizing SpecReFlow for real-time applications. SpecReFlow is a software-only solution for restoring image content lost due to SR, making it readily deployable in existing clinical settings to improve endoscopy video quality for accurate diagnosis and treatment.

5.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39287713

RESUMEN

PURPOSE: In order to produce a surgical gesture recognition system that can support a wide variety of procedures, either a very large annotated dataset must be acquired, or fitted models must generalize to new labels (so-called zero-shot capability). In this paper we investigate the feasibility of latter option. METHODS: Leveraging the bridge-prompt framework, we prompt-tune a pre-trained vision-text model (CLIP) for gesture recognition in surgical videos. This can utilize extensive outside video data such as text, but also make use of label meta-data and weakly supervised contrastive losses. RESULTS: Our experiments show that prompt-based video encoder outperforms standard encoders in surgical gesture recognition tasks. Notably, it displays strong performance in zero-shot scenarios, where gestures/tasks that were not provided during the encoder training phase are included in the prediction phase. Additionally, we measure the benefit of inclusion text descriptions in the feature extractor training schema. CONCLUSION: Bridge-prompt and similar pre-trained + prompt-tuned video encoder models present significant visual representation for surgical robotics, especially in gesture recognition tasks. Given the diverse range of surgical tasks (gestures), the ability of these models to zero-shot transfer without the need for any task (gesture) specific retraining makes them invaluable.

6.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39220624

RESUMEN

Multi-site diffusion MRI data is often acquired on different scanners and with distinct protocols. Differences in hardware and acquisition result in data that contains site dependent information, which confounds connectome analyses aiming to combine such multi-site data. We propose a data-driven solution that isolates site-invariant information whilst maintaining relevant features of the connectome. We construct a latent space that is uncorrelated with the imaging site and highly correlated with patient age and a connectome summary measure. Here, we focus on network modularity. The proposed model is a conditional, variational autoencoder with three additional prediction tasks: one for patient age, and two for modularity trained exclusively on data from each site. This model enables us to 1) isolate site-invariant biological features, 2) learn site context, and 3) re-inject site context and project biological features to desired site domains. We tested these hypotheses by projecting 77 connectomes from two studies and protocols (Vanderbilt Memory and Aging Project (VMAP) and Biomarkers of Cognitive Decline Among Normal Individuals (BIOCARD) to a common site. We find that the resulting dataset of modularity has statistically similar means (p-value <0.05) across sites. In addition, we fit a linear model to the joint dataset and find that positive correlations between age and modularity were preserved.

7.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39281711

RESUMEN

Diffusion magnetic resonance imaging (dMRI) offers the ability to assess subvoxel brain microstructure through the extraction of biomarkers like fractional anisotropy, as well as to unveil brain connectivity by reconstructing white matter fiber trajectories. However, accurate analysis becomes challenging at the interface between cerebrospinal fluid and white matter, where the MRI signal originates from both the cerebrospinal fluid and the white matter partial volume. The presence of free water partial volume effects introduces a substantial bias in estimating diffusion properties, thereby limiting the clinical utility of DWI. Moreover, current mathematical models often lack applicability to single-shell acquisitions commonly encountered in clinical settings. Without appropriate regularization, direct model fitting becomes impractical. We propose a novel voxel-based deep learning method for mapping and correcting free-water partial volume contamination in DWI to address these limitations. This approach leverages data-driven techniques to reliably infer plausible free-water volumes across different diffusion MRI acquisition schemes, including single-shell acquisitions. Our evaluation demonstrates that the introduced methodology consistently produces more consistent and plausible results than previous approaches. By effectively mitigating the impact of free water partial volume effects, our approach enhances the accuracy and reliability of DWI analysis for single-shell dMRI, thereby expanding its applications in assessing brain microstructure and connectivity.

8.
IEEE Trans Med Imaging ; PP2024 Jun 10.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38857148

RESUMEN

Rigid motion tracking is paramount in many medical imaging applications where movements need to be detected, corrected, or accounted for. Modern strategies rely on convolutional neural networks (CNN) and pose this problem as rigid registration. Yet, CNNs do not exploit natural symmetries in this task, as they are equivariant to translations (their outputs shift with their inputs) but not to rotations. Here we propose EquiTrack, the first method that uses recent steerable SE(3)-equivariant CNNs (E-CNN) for motion tracking. While steerable E-CNNs can extract corresponding features across different poses, testing them on noisy medical images reveals that they do not have enough learning capacity to learn noise invariance. Thus, we introduce a hybrid architecture that pairs a denoiser with an E-CNN to decouple the processing of anatomically irrelevant intensity features from the extraction of equivariant spatial features. Rigid transforms are then estimated in closed-form. EquiTrack outperforms state-of-the-art learning and optimisation methods for motion tracking in adult brain MRI and fetal MRI time series. Our code is available at https://github.com/BBillot/EquiTrack.

9.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39219981

RESUMEN

Gradient nonlinearities not only induce spatial distortion in magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), but also introduce discrepancies between intended and acquired diffusion sensitization in diffusion weighted (DW) MRI. Advances in scanner performance have increased the importance of correcting gradient nonlinearities. The most common approaches for gradient nonlinear field estimations rely on phantom calibration field maps which are not always feasible, especially on retrospective data. Here, we derive a quadratic minimization problem for the complete gradient nonlinear field (L(r)). This approach starts with corrupt diffusion signal and estimates the L(r) in two scenarios: (1) the true diffusion tensor known and (2) the true diffusion tensor unknown (i.e., diffusion tensor is estimated). We show the validity of this mathematical approach, both theoretically and through tensor simulation. The estimated field is assessed through diffusion tensor metrics: mean diffusivity (MD), fractional anisotropy (FA), and principal eigenvector (V1). In simulation with 300 diffusion tensors, the study shows the mathematical model is not ill-posed and remains stable. We find when the true diffusion tensor is known (1) the change in determinant of the estimated L(r) field and the true field is near zero and (2) the median difference in estimated L(r) corrected diffusion metrics to true values is near zero. We find the results of L(r) estimation are dependent on the level of L(r) corruption. This work provides an approach to estimate gradient field without the need for additional calibration scans. To the best of our knowledge, the mathematical derivation presented here is novel.

10.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39220622

RESUMEN

Mapping information from photographic images to volumetric medical imaging scans is essential for linking spaces with physical environments, such as in image-guided surgery. Current methods of accurate photographic image to computed tomography (CT) image mapping can be computationally intensive and/or require specialized hardware. For general purpose 3-D mapping of bulk specimens in histological processing, a cost-effective solution is necessary. Here, we compare the integration of a commercial 3-D camera and cell phone imaging with a surface registration pipeline. Using surgical implants and chuck-eye steak as phantom tests, we obtain 3-D CT reconstruction and sets of photographic images from two sources: Canfield Imaging's H1 camera and an iPhone 14 Pro. We perform surface reconstruction from the photographic images using commercial tools and open-source code for Neural Radiance Fields (NeRF) respectively. We complete surface registration of the reconstructed surfaces with the iterative closest point (ICP) method. Manually placed landmarks were identified at three locations on each of the surfaces. Registration of the Canfield surfaces for three objects yields landmark distance errors of 1.747, 3.932, and 1.692 mm, while registration of the respective iPhone camera surfaces yields errors of 1.222, 2.061, and 5.155 mm. Photographic imaging of an organ sample prior to tissue sectioning provides a low-cost alternative to establish correspondence between histological samples and 3-D anatomical samples.

11.
J Med Imaging (Bellingham) ; 11(4): 044008, 2024 Jul.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39185475

RESUMEN

Purpose: In brain diffusion magnetic resonance imaging (dMRI), the volumetric and bundle analyses of whole-brain tissue microstructure and connectivity can be severely impeded by an incomplete field of view (FOV). We aim to develop a method for imputing the missing slices directly from existing dMRI scans with an incomplete FOV. We hypothesize that the imputed image with a complete FOV can improve whole-brain tractography for corrupted data with an incomplete FOV. Therefore, our approach provides a desirable alternative to discarding the valuable brain dMRI data, enabling subsequent tractography analyses that would otherwise be challenging or unattainable with corrupted data. Approach: We propose a framework based on a deep generative model that estimates the absent brain regions in dMRI scans with an incomplete FOV. The model is capable of learning both the diffusion characteristics in diffusion-weighted images (DWIs) and the anatomical features evident in the corresponding structural images for efficiently imputing missing slices of DWIs in the incomplete part of the FOV. Results: For evaluating the imputed slices, on the Wisconsin Registry for Alzheimer's Prevention (WRAP) dataset, the proposed framework achieved PSNR b 0 = 22.397 , SSIM b 0 = 0.905 , PSNR b 1300 = 22.479 , and SSIM b 1300 = 0.893 ; on the National Alzheimer's Coordinating Center (NACC) dataset, it achieved PSNR b 0 = 21.304 , SSIM b 0 = 0.892 , PSNR b 1300 = 21.599 , and SSIM b 1300 = 0.877 . The proposed framework improved the tractography accuracy, as demonstrated by an increased average Dice score for 72 tracts ( p < 0.001 ) on both the WRAP and NACC datasets. Conclusions: Results suggest that the proposed framework achieved sufficient imputation performance in brain dMRI data with an incomplete FOV for improving whole-brain tractography, thereby repairing the corrupted data. Our approach achieved more accurate whole-brain tractography results with an extended and complete FOV and reduced the uncertainty when analyzing bundles associated with Alzheimer's disease.

12.
Magn Reson Imaging ; 111: 113-119, 2024 Sep.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38537892

RESUMEN

Data harmonization is necessary for removing confounding effects in multi-site diffusion image analysis. One such harmonization method, LinearRISH, scales rotationally invariant spherical harmonic (RISH) features from one site ("target") to the second ("reference") to reduce confounding scanner effects. However, reference and target site designations are not arbitrary and resultant diffusion metrics (fractional anisotropy, mean diffusivity) are biased by this choice. In this work we propose MidRISH: rather than scaling reference RISH features to target RISH features, we project both sites to a mid-space. We validate MidRISH with the following experiments: harmonizing scanner differences from 37 matched patients free of cognitive impairment, and harmonizing acquisition and study differences on 117 matched patients free of cognitive impairment. We find that MidRISH reduces bias of reference selection while preserving harmonization efficacy of LinearRISH. Users should be cautious when performing LinearRISH harmonization. To select a reference site is to choose diffusion metric effect-size. Our proposed method eliminates the bias-inducing site selection step.


Asunto(s)
Algoritmos , Humanos , Femenino , Masculino , Procesamiento de Imagen Asistido por Computador/métodos , Reproducibilidad de los Resultados , Encéfalo/diagnóstico por imagen , Imagen de Difusión por Resonancia Magnética/métodos , Anisotropía , Anciano , Persona de Mediana Edad , Imagen de Difusión Tensora/métodos , Disfunción Cognitiva/diagnóstico por imagen , Interpretación de Imagen Asistida por Computador/métodos
13.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39220211

RESUMEN

Diffusion MRI (dMRI) streamline tractography, the gold-standard for in vivo estimation of white matter (WM) pathways in the brain, has long been considered as a product of WM microstructure. However, recent advances in tractography demonstrated that convolutional recurrent neural networks (CoRNN) trained with a teacher-student framework have the ability to learn to propagate streamlines directly from T1 and anatomical context. Training for this network has previously relied on high resolution dMRI. In this paper, we generalize the training mechanism to traditional clinical resolution data, which allows generalizability across sensitive and susceptible study populations. We train CoRNN on a small subset of the Baltimore Longitudinal Study of Aging (BLSA), which better resembles clinical scans. We define a metric, termed the epsilon ball seeding method, to compare T1 tractography and traditional diffusion tractography at the streamline level. We show that under this metric T1 tractography generated by CoRNN reproduces diffusion tractography with approximately three millimeters of error.

14.
medRxiv ; 2024 Jan 22.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37662348

RESUMEN

Background: As large analyses merge data across sites, a deeper understanding of variance in statistical assessment across the sources of data becomes critical for valid analyses. Diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) exhibits spatially varying and correlated noise, so care must be taken with distributional assumptions. Purpose: We characterize the role of physiology, subject compliance, and the interaction of subject with the scanner in the understanding of DTI variability, as modeled in spatial variance of derived metrics in homogeneous regions. Methods: We analyze DTI data from 1035 subjects in the Baltimore Longitudinal Study of Aging (BLSA), with ages ranging from 22.4 to 103 years old. For each subject, up to 12 longitudinal sessions were conducted. We assess variance of DTI scalars within regions of interest (ROIs) defined by four segmentation methods and investigate the relationships between the variance and covariates, including baseline age, time from the baseline (referred to as "interval"), motion, sex, and whether it is the first scan or the second scan in the session. Results: Covariate effects are heterogeneous and bilaterally symmetric across ROIs. Inter-session interval is positively related (p ≪ 0.001) to FA variance in the cuneus and occipital gyrus, but negatively (p ≪ 0.001) in the caudate nucleus. Males show significantly (p ≪ 0.001) higher FA variance in the right putamen, thalamus, body of the corpus callosum, and cingulate gyrus. In 62 out of 176 ROIs defined by the Eve type-1 atlas, an increase in motion is associated (p < 0.05) with a decrease in FA variance. Head motion increases during the rescan of DTI (Δµ = 0.045 millimeters per volume). Conclusions: The effects of each covariate on DTI variance, and their relationships across ROIs are complex. Ultimately, we encourage researchers to include estimates of variance when sharing data and consider models of heteroscedasticity in analysis. This work provides a foundation for study planning to account for regional variations in metric variance.

15.
ArXiv ; 2024 Jan 24.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38344221

RESUMEN

Connectivity matrices derived from diffusion MRI (dMRI) provide an interpretable and generalizable way of understanding the human brain connectome. However, dMRI suffers from inter-site and between-scanner variation, which impedes analysis across datasets to improve robustness and reproducibility of results. To evaluate different harmonization approaches on connectivity matrices, we compared graph measures derived from these matrices before and after applying three harmonization techniques: mean shift, ComBat, and CycleGAN. The sample comprises 168 age-matched, sex-matched normal subjects from two studies: the Vanderbilt Memory and Aging Project (VMAP) and the Biomarkers of Cognitive Decline Among Normal Individuals (BIOCARD). First, we plotted the graph measures and used coefficient of variation (CoV) and the Mann-Whitney U test to evaluate different methods' effectiveness in removing site effects on the matrices and the derived graph measures. ComBat effectively eliminated site effects for global efficiency and modularity and outperformed the other two methods. However, all methods exhibited poor performance when harmonizing average betweenness centrality. Second, we tested whether our harmonization methods preserved correlations between age and graph measures. All methods except for CycleGAN in one direction improved correlations between age and global efficiency and between age and modularity from insignificant to significant with p-values less than 0.05.

16.
Neuroinformatics ; 22(2): 193-205, 2024 Apr.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38526701

RESUMEN

T1-weighted (T1w) MRI has low frequency intensity artifacts due to magnetic field inhomogeneities. Removal of these biases in T1w MRI images is a critical preprocessing step to ensure spatially consistent image interpretation. N4ITK bias field correction, the current state-of-the-art, is implemented in such a way that makes it difficult to port between different pipelines and workflows, thus making it hard to reimplement and reproduce results across local, cloud, and edge platforms. Moreover, N4ITK is opaque to optimization before and after its application, meaning that methodological development must work around the inhomogeneity correction step. Given the importance of bias fields correction in structural preprocessing and flexible implementation, we pursue a deep learning approximation / reinterpretation of the N4ITK bias fields correction to create a method which is portable, flexible, and fully differentiable. In this paper, we trained a deep learning network "DeepN4" on eight independent cohorts from 72 different scanners and age ranges with N4ITK-corrected T1w MRI and bias field for supervision in log space. We found that we can closely approximate N4ITK bias fields correction with naïve networks. We evaluate the peak signal to noise ratio (PSNR) in test dataset against the N4ITK corrected images. The median PSNR of corrected images between N4ITK and DeepN4 was 47.96 dB. In addition, we assess the DeepN4 model on eight additional external datasets and show the generalizability of the approach. This study establishes that incompatible N4ITK preprocessing steps can be closely approximated by naïve deep neural networks, facilitating more flexibility. All code and models are released at https://github.com/MASILab/DeepN4 .


Asunto(s)
Procesamiento de Imagen Asistido por Computador , Imagen por Resonancia Magnética , Procesamiento de Imagen Asistido por Computador/métodos , Imagen por Resonancia Magnética/métodos , Algoritmos , Redes Neurales de la Computación , Sesgo
17.
J Med Imaging (Bellingham) ; 11(2): 024011, 2024 Mar.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38655188

RESUMEN

Purpose: Diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) is a magnetic resonance imaging technique that provides unique information about white matter microstructure in the brain but is susceptible to confounding effects introduced by scanner or acquisition differences. ComBat is a leading approach for addressing these site biases. However, despite its frequent use for harmonization, ComBat's robustness toward site dissimilarities and overall cohort size have not yet been evaluated in terms of DTI. Approach: As a baseline, we match N=358 participants from two sites to create a "silver standard" that simulates a cohort for multi-site harmonization. Across sites, we harmonize mean fractional anisotropy and mean diffusivity, calculated using participant DTI data, for the regions of interest defined by the JHU EVE-Type III atlas. We bootstrap 10 iterations at 19 levels of total sample size, 10 levels of sample size imbalance between sites, and 6 levels of mean age difference between sites to quantify (i) ßAGE, the linear regression coefficient of the relationship between FA and age; (ii) Î³/f*, the ComBat-estimated site-shift; and (iii) Î´/f*, the ComBat-estimated site-scaling. We characterize the reliability of ComBat by evaluating the root mean squared error in these three metrics and examine if there is a correlation between the reliability of ComBat and a violation of assumptions. Results: ComBat remains well behaved for ßAGE when N>162 and when the mean age difference is less than 4 years. The assumptions of the ComBat model regarding the normality of residual distributions are not violated as the model becomes unstable. Conclusion: Prior to harmonization of DTI data with ComBat, the input cohort should be examined for size and covariate distributions of each site. Direct assessment of residual distributions is less informative on stability than bootstrap analysis. We caution use ComBat of in situations that do not conform to the above thresholds.

18.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39310215

RESUMEN

Connectivity matrices derived from diffusion MRI (dMRI) provide an interpretable and generalizable way of understanding the human brain connectome. However, dMRI suffers from inter-site and between-scanner variation, which impedes analysis across datasets to improve robustness and reproducibility of results. To evaluate different harmonization approaches on connectivity matrices, we compared graph measures derived from these matrices before and after applying three harmonization techniques: mean shift, ComBat, and CycleGAN. The sample comprises 168 age-matched, sex-matched normal subjects from two studies: the Vanderbilt Memory and Aging Project (VMAP) and the Biomarkers of Cognitive Decline Among Normal Individuals (BIOCARD). First, we plotted the graph measures and used coefficient of variation (CoV) and the Mann-Whitney U test to evaluate different methods' effectiveness in removing site effects on the matrices and the derived graph measures. ComBat effectively eliminated site effects for global efficiency and modularity and outperformed the other two methods. However, all methods exhibited poor performance when harmonizing average betweenness centrality. Second, we tested whether our harmonization methods preserved correlations between age and graph measures. All methods except for CycleGAN in one direction improved correlations between age and global efficiency and between age and modularity from insignificant to significant with p-values less than 0.05.

19.
J Med Imaging (Bellingham) ; 11(4): 044007, 2024 Jul.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39185477

RESUMEN

Purpose: As large analyses merge data across sites, a deeper understanding of variance in statistical assessment across the sources of data becomes critical for valid analyses. Diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) exhibits spatially varying and correlated noise, so care must be taken with distributional assumptions. Here, we characterize the role of physiology, subject compliance, and the interaction of the subject with the scanner in the understanding of DTI variability, as modeled in the spatial variance of derived metrics in homogeneous regions. Approach: We analyze DTI data from 1035 subjects in the Baltimore Longitudinal Study of Aging, with ages ranging from 22.4 to 103 years old. For each subject, up to 12 longitudinal sessions were conducted. We assess the variance of DTI scalars within regions of interest (ROIs) defined by four segmentation methods and investigate the relationships between the variance and covariates, including baseline age, time from the baseline (referred to as "interval"), motion, sex, and whether it is the first scan or the second scan in the session. Results: Covariate effects are heterogeneous and bilaterally symmetric across ROIs. Inter-session interval is positively related ( p ≪ 0.001 ) to FA variance in the cuneus and occipital gyrus, but negatively ( p ≪ 0.001 ) in the caudate nucleus. Males show significantly ( p ≪ 0.001 ) higher FA variance in the right putamen, thalamus, body of the corpus callosum, and cingulate gyrus. In 62 out of 176 ROIs defined by the Eve type-1 atlas, an increase in motion is associated ( p < 0.05 ) with a decrease in FA variance. Head motion increases during the rescan of DTI ( Δ µ = 0.045 mm per volume). Conclusions: The effects of each covariate on DTI variance and their relationships across ROIs are complex. Ultimately, we encourage researchers to include estimates of variance when sharing data and consider models of heteroscedasticity in analysis. This work provides a foundation for study planning to account for regional variations in metric variance.

20.
ArXiv ; 2024 Jan 21.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37986731

RESUMEN

Imaging findings inconsistent with those expected at specific chronological age ranges may serve as early indicators of neurological disorders and increased mortality risk. Estimation of chronological age, and deviations from expected results, from structural magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) data has become an important proxy task for developing biomarkers that are sensitive to such deviations. Complementary to structural analysis, diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) has proven effective in identifying age-related microstructural changes within the brain white matter, thereby presenting itself as a promising additional modality for brain age prediction. Although early studies have sought to harness DTI's advantages for age estimation, there is no evidence that the success of this prediction is owed to the unique microstructural and diffusivity features that DTI provides, rather than the macrostructural features that are also available in DTI data. Therefore, we seek to develop white-matter-specific age estimation to capture deviations from normal white matter aging. Specifically, we deliberately disregard the macrostructural information when predicting age from DTI scalar images, using two distinct methods. The first method relies on extracting only microstructural features from regions of interest (ROIs). The second applies 3D residual neural networks (ResNets) to learn features directly from the images, which are non-linearly registered and warped to a template to minimize macrostructural variations. When tested on unseen data, the first method yields mean absolute error (MAE) of 6.11 ± 0.19 years for cognitively normal participants and MAE of 6.62 ± 0.30 years for cognitively impaired participants, while the second method achieves MAE of 4.69 ± 0.23 years for cognitively normal participants and MAE of 4.96 ± 0.28 years for cognitively impaired participants. We find that the ResNet model captures subtler, non-macrostructural features for brain age prediction.

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