IEEE Access (Jan 2020)

MuscNet, a Weighted Voting Model of Multi-Source Connectivity Networks to Predict Mild Cognitive Impairment Using Resting-State Functional MRI

  • Jialiang Li,
  • Zhaomin Yao,
  • Meiyu Duan,
  • Shuai Liu,
  • Fei Li,
  • Haiyang Zhu,
  • Zhiqiang Xia,
  • Lan Huang,
  • Fengfeng Zhou

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1109/ACCESS.2020.3025828
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8
pp. 174023 – 174031

Abstract

Read online

The neurological disorder mild cognitive impairment (MCI) demonstrates minor impacts on the patient's daily activities and may be ignored as the status of normal aging. But some of the MCI patients may further develop into severe statuses like Alzheimer's disease (AD). The brain functional connectivity network (BFCN) was usually constructed from the resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging (rs-fMRI) data. This technology has been widely used to detect the neurodegenerative dementia and to reveal the intrinsic mechanism of neural activities. The BFCN edge was usually determined by the pairwise correlation between the brain regions. This study proposed a weighted voting model of multi-source connectivity networks (MuscNet) by integrating multiple BFCNs of different correlation coefficients. Our model was further improved by removing redundant features. The experimental data demonstrated that different BFCNs contributed complementary information to each other and MuscNet outperformed the existing models on detecting MCI patients. The previous study suggested the existence of multiple solutions with similarly good performance for a machine learning problem. The proposed model MuscNet utilized a weighted voting strategy to slightly outperform the existing studies, suggesting an effective way to fuse multiple base models. The reason may need further theoretical investigations about why different base models contribute to each other for the MCI prediction.

Keywords