4.7 Article

Deep neural networks and kernel regression achieve comparable accuracies for functional connectivity prediction of behavior and demographics

Journal

NEUROIMAGE
Volume 206, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2019.116276

Keywords

Fingerprinting; Deep learning; Resting-state fMRI; Graph convolutional neural network; Kernel ridge regression

Funding

  1. Singapore Ministry of Education (MOE) Tier 2 [MOE2014-T2-2-016]
  2. National University of Singapore (NUS) Strategic Research [DPRT/944/09/14]
  3. NUS SOM Aspiration Fund [R185000271720]
  4. Singapore NMRC [CBRG/0088/2015]
  5. NUS YIA
  6. Singapore National Research Foundation (NRF) (Class of 2017)
  7. Athinoula A. Martinos Center for Biomedical Imaging at the Massachusetts General Hospital [1S10RR023401, 1S10RR019307, 1S10RR023043]
  8. 16 NIH Institutes and Centres [1U54MH091657]
  9. McDonnell Center for Systems Neuroscience at Washington University

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There is significant interest in the development and application of deep neural networks (DNNs) to neuroimaging data. A growing literature suggests that DNNs outperform their classical counterparts in a variety of neuroimaging applications, yet there are few direct comparisons of relative utility. Here, we compared the performance of three DNN architectures and a classical machine learning algorithm (kernel regression) in predicting individual phenotypes from whole-brain resting-state functional connectivity (RSFC) patterns. One of the DNNs was a generic fully-connected feedforward neural network, while the other two DNNs were recently published approaches specifically designed to exploit the structure of connectome data. By using a combined sample of almost 10,000 participants from the Human Connectome Project (HCP) and UK Biobank, we showed that the three DNNs and kernel regression achieved similar performance across a wide range of behavioral and demographic measures. Furthermore, the generic feedforward neural network exhibited similar performance to the two state-of-the-art connectome-specific DNNs. When predicting fluid intelligence in the UK Biobank, performance of all algorithms dramatically improved when sample size increased from 100 to 1000 subjects. Improvement was smaller, but still significant, when sample size increased from 1000 to 5000 subjects. Importantly, kernel regression was competitive across all sample sizes. Overall, our study suggests that kernel regression is as effective as DNNs for RSFC-based behavioral prediction, while incurring significantly lower computational costs. Therefore, kernel regression might serve as a useful baseline algorithm for future studies.

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