A Foundational Brain Dynamics Model via Stochastic Optimal Control
This work addresses the challenge of scalable and efficient brain dynamics modeling for neuroscience applications, though it appears incremental as it builds on existing SOC and SSL frameworks.
The authors tackled the problem of modeling complex and noisy fMRI brain dynamics by introducing a foundational model based on stochastic optimal control and amortized inference, achieving state-of-the-art results on tasks like demographic prediction and disease diagnosis across multiple datasets.
We introduce a foundational model for brain dynamics that utilizes stochastic optimal control (SOC) and amortized inference. Our method features a continuous-discrete state space model (SSM) that can robustly handle the intricate and noisy nature of fMRI signals. To address computational limitations, we implement an approximation strategy grounded in the SOC framework. Additionally, we present a simulation-free latent dynamics approach that employs locally linear approximations, facilitating efficient and scalable inference. For effective representation learning, we derive an Evidence Lower Bound (ELBO) from the SOC formulation, which integrates smoothly with recent advancements in self-supervised learning (SSL), thereby promoting robust and transferable representations. Pre-trained on extensive datasets such as the UKB, our model attains state-of-the-art results across a variety of downstream tasks, including demographic prediction, trait analysis, disease diagnosis, and prognosis. Moreover, evaluating on external datasets such as HCP-A, ABIDE, and ADHD200 further validates its superior abilities and resilience across different demographic and clinical distributions. Our foundational model provides a scalable and efficient approach for deciphering brain dynamics, opening up numerous applications in neuroscience.