LGMay 27

Learning Robust and Task-Invariant Functional Representation from fMRI through Siamese Self-Supervised Learning

arXiv:2605.2899085.8h-index: 32
AI Analysis

For neuroimaging researchers with small datasets, this method reduces overfitting and computational costs while achieving strong performance across diverse tasks.

BrainSimSiam, a lightweight self-supervised framework, learns robust fMRI representations that generalize across tasks, outperforming supervised baselines and approaching large-scale model performance in data-limited settings.

Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) is a powerful tool for investigating human brain function. However, the high cost of data acquisition and the inherent subjectivity of psychiatric rating scales often lead to datasets with small sample sizes and variable label quality, especially when targeting a specific neurological condition. Combined with the inherently high dimensionality of fMRI data, these limitations substantially increase the risk of model overfitting. Recent years have seen growing interest in developing fMRI foundation models by combining multiple datasets; however, the computational resources needed for pretraining and fine-tuning are often prohibitive. We show that a lightweight self-supervised framework yields representations that generalize across diverse downstream tasks, outperforming fully supervised baselines and approaching the performance of large-scale models. We introduce BrainSimSiam, a data-efficient self-supervised representation learning framework that leverages positive-only data pairs to learn robust and generalizable features. We demonstrate that the learned representations achieve strong performance across multiple downstream classification and regression tasks, highlighting the potential of BrainSimSiam for data-limited neuroimaging applications.

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