CVNCQMApr 4, 2018

Gaussian Process Uncertainty in Age Estimation as a Measure of Brain Abnormality

arXiv:1804.01296v153 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses the challenge of identifying neuropathology in brain imaging data for clinical applications, representing an incremental improvement over existing age prediction error methods.

The authors tackled the problem of detecting brain abnormalities by proposing uncertainty metrics from Gaussian process regression as alternatives to prediction error in age estimation models, finding that these uncertainty-based measurements better separate diseased subjects from healthy individuals across multiple neuroimaging features.

Multivariate regression models for age estimation are a powerful tool for assessing abnormal brain morphology associated to neuropathology. Age prediction models are built on cohorts of healthy subjects and are built to reflect normal aging patterns. The application of these multivariate models to diseased subjects usually results in high prediction errors, under the hypothesis that neuropathology presents a similar degenerative pattern as that of accelerated aging. In this work, we propose an alternative to the idea that pathology follows a similar trajectory than normal aging. Instead, we propose the use of metrics which measure deviations from the mean aging trajectory. We propose to measure these deviations using two different metrics: uncertainty in a Gaussian process regression model and a newly proposed age weighted uncertainty measure. Consequently, our approach assumes that pathologic brain patterns are different to those of normal aging. We present results for subjects with autism, mild cognitive impairment and Alzheimer's disease to highlight the versatility of the approach to different diseases and age ranges. We evaluate volume, thickness, and VBM features for quantifying brain morphology. Our evaluations are performed on a large number of images obtained from a variety of publicly available neuroimaging databases. Across all features, our uncertainty based measurements yield a better separation between diseased subjects and healthy individuals than the prediction error. Finally, we illustrate differences in the disease pattern to normal aging, supporting the application of uncertainty as a measure of neuropathology.

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