4.5 Article

ADCoC: Adaptive Distribution Modeling Based Collaborative Clustering for Disentangling Disease Heterogeneity from Neuroimaging Data

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IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TETCI.2021.3136587

关键词

Diseases; Adaptation models; Neuroimaging; Covariance matrices; Collaboration; Magnetic resonance imaging; Dictionaries; Clustering; MRI; Parkinsons disease; neuroimaging; feature selection

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In this paper, a method is proposed to improve clustering of subjects in neuroimaging applications by exploiting the underlying clusters of features and suppressing noise through nonnegative matrix tri-factorization and adaptive regularization. Experimental results on synthetic data and real magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) data demonstrate the superiority of the proposed method.
Conventional clustering techniques for neuroimaging applications usually focus on capturing differences between given subjects, while neglecting arising differences between features and the potential bias caused by degraded data quality. In practice, collected neuroimaging data are often inevitably contaminated by noise, which may lead to errors in clustering and clinical interpretation. Additionally, most methods ignore the importance of feature grouping towards optimal clustering. In this paper, we exploit the underlying heterogeneous clusters of features to serve as weak supervision for improved clustering of subjects, which is achieved by simultaneously clustering subjects and features via nonnegative matrix tri-factorization. In order to suppress noise, we further introduce adaptive regularization based on coefficient distribution modeling. Particularly, unlike conventional sparsity regularization techniques that assume zero mean of the coefficients, we form the distributions using the data of interest so that they could better fit the non-negative coefficients. In this manner, the proposed approach is expected to be more effective and robust against noise. We compared the proposed method with standard techniques and recently published methods demonstrating superior clustering performance on synthetic data with known ground truth labels. Furthermore, when applying our proposed technique to magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) data from a cohort of patients with Parkinson's disease, we identified two stable and highly reproducible patient clusters characterized by frontal and posterior cortical/medial temporal atrophy patterns, respectively, which also showed corresponding differences in cognitive characteristics.

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