4.7 Article

Multi-site MRI harmonization via attention-guided deep domain adaptation for brain disorder identification

Journal

MEDICAL IMAGE ANALYSIS
Volume 71, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.media.2021.102076

Keywords

Brain disorder; Structural MRI; Harmonization; Domain adaptation; Attention

Funding

  1. NIH [AG041721, AG053867, MH108560]

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Structural magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) has great value in computer-aided brain disorder identification. Multi-site MRI data can increase sample size and statistical power, but may face challenges due to differences between sites. A proposed attention-guided deep domain adaptation framework shows effectiveness in automated brain disorder identification with multi-site MRIs.
Structural magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) has shown great clinical and practical values in computer-aided brain disorder identification. Multi-site MRI data increase sample size and statistical power, but are susceptible to inter site heterogeneity caused by different scanners, scanning protocols, and subject cohorts. Multi-site MRI harmonization (MMH) helps alleviate the inter-site difference for subsequent analysis. Some MMH methods performed at imaging level or feature extraction level are concise but lack robustness and flexibility to some extent. Even though several machine/deep learning-based methods have been proposed for MMH, some of them require a portion of labeled data in the to-be-analyzed target domain or ignore the potential contributions of different brain regions to the identification of brain disorders. In this work, we propose an attention-guided deep domain adaptation (AD(2)A) framework for MMH and apply it to automated brain disorder identification with multi-site MRIs. The proposed framework does not need any category label information of target data, and can also automatically identify discriminative regions in whole-brain MR images. Specifically, the proposed AD(2)A is composed of three key modules: (1) an MRI feature encoding module to extract representations of input MRIs, (2) an attention discovery module to automatically locate discriminative dementia-related regions in each whole-brain MRI scan, and (3) a domain transfer module trained with adversarial learning for knowledge transfer between the source and target domains. Experiments have been performed on 2572 subjects from four benchmark datasets with T1-weighted structural MRIs, with results demonstrating the effectiveness of the proposed method in both tasks of brain disorder identification and disease progression prediction. (C) 2021 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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