LGMLMay 15

Isolating Nonlinear Independent Sources in fMRI with $β$-TCVAE Models

arXiv:2605.1670827.4
Predicted impact top 76% in LG · last 90 daysOriginality Incremental advance
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This work provides a pilot investigation bridging nonlinear representation learning and fMRI analysis, offering a potential alternative to linear ICA for neuroimaging, though validation is limited to qualitative and exploratory metrics.

The authors adapted β-TCVAE to fMRI data for nonlinear source disentanglement, recovering biologically relevant spatial components like the default mode network and demonstrating coherent brain organization patterns via functional network connectivity.

Learning meaningful latent representations from nonlinear fMRI data remains a fundamental challenge in neuroimaging analysis. Traditional independent component analysis, widely used due to its ability to estimate interpretable functional brain networks, relies on a linear mixing assumption for latent sources, limiting its ability to capture the inherently nonlinear and complex organization of brain dynamics. More recently, deep representation learning methods have emerged as promising alternatives for modeling nonlinear latent structure. However, many of these approaches have been evaluated primarily on simulated datasets or natural image benchmarks, with comparatively limited validation on real-world neuroimaging data such as fMRI. In this work, we are motivated by the $β$-TCVAE (Total Correlation Variational Autoencoder), a refinement of the $β$-VAE framework for learning latent representations without introducing additional hyperparameters during training. We adapt and modify this model to fMRI data for nonlinear source disentanglement, aiming to separate mixed spatial and temporal brain signals into interpretable components. We show that the $β$-TCVAE framework can recover meaningful nonlinear spatial components with biological relevance, including well-established intrinsic connectivity networks such as the default mode network. Furthermore, we evaluate the learned representations using functional network connectivity, showing that the latent structure captures coherent and interpretable brain organization patterns. This study provides a pilot investigation that bridges nonlinear representation learning and fMRI analysis.

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