FBNETGEN: Task-aware GNN-based fMRI Analysis via Functional Brain Network Generation

Xuan Kan, Hejie Cui, Joshua Lukemire, Ying Guo, Carl Yang
Proceedings of The 5th International Conference on Medical Imaging with Deep Learning, PMLR 172:618-637, 2022.

Abstract

Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) is one of the most common imaging modalities to investigate brain functions. Recent studies in neuroscience stress the great potential of functional brain networks constructed from fMRI data for clinical predictions. Traditional functional brain networks, however, are noisy and unaware of downstream prediction tasks, while also incompatible with the deep graph neural network (GNN) models. In order to fully unleash the power of GNNs in network-based fMRI analysis, we develop FBNETGEN, a task-aware and interpretable fMRI analysis framework via deep brain network generation. In particular, we formulate (1) prominent region of interest (ROI) features extraction, (2) brain networks generation, and (3) clinical predictions with GNNs, in an end-to-end trainable model under the guidance of particular prediction tasks. Along with the process, the key novel component is the graph generator which learns to transform raw time-series features into task-oriented brain networks. Our learnable graphs also provide unique interpretations by highlighting prediction-related brain regions. Comprehensive experiments on two datasets, i.e., the recently released and currently largest publicly available fMRI dataset Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD), and the widely-used fMRI dataset PNC, prove the superior effectiveness and interpretability of FBNETGEN. The implementation is available at https://github.com/Wayfear/FBNETGEN.

Cite this Paper


BibTeX
@InProceedings{pmlr-v172-kan22a, title = {FBNETGEN: Task-aware GNN-based fMRI Analysis via Functional Brain Network Generation}, author = {Kan, Xuan and Cui, Hejie and Lukemire, Joshua and Guo, Ying and Yang, Carl}, booktitle = {Proceedings of The 5th International Conference on Medical Imaging with Deep Learning}, pages = {618--637}, year = {2022}, editor = {Konukoglu, Ender and Menze, Bjoern and Venkataraman, Archana and Baumgartner, Christian and Dou, Qi and Albarqouni, Shadi}, volume = {172}, series = {Proceedings of Machine Learning Research}, month = {06--08 Jul}, publisher = {PMLR}, pdf = {https://proceedings.mlr.press/v172/kan22a/kan22a.pdf}, url = {https://proceedings.mlr.press/v172/kan22a.html}, abstract = {Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) is one of the most common imaging modalities to investigate brain functions. Recent studies in neuroscience stress the great potential of functional brain networks constructed from fMRI data for clinical predictions. Traditional functional brain networks, however, are noisy and unaware of downstream prediction tasks, while also incompatible with the deep graph neural network (GNN) models. In order to fully unleash the power of GNNs in network-based fMRI analysis, we develop FBNETGEN, a task-aware and interpretable fMRI analysis framework via deep brain network generation. In particular, we formulate (1) prominent region of interest (ROI) features extraction, (2) brain networks generation, and (3) clinical predictions with GNNs, in an end-to-end trainable model under the guidance of particular prediction tasks. Along with the process, the key novel component is the graph generator which learns to transform raw time-series features into task-oriented brain networks. Our learnable graphs also provide unique interpretations by highlighting prediction-related brain regions. Comprehensive experiments on two datasets, i.e., the recently released and currently largest publicly available fMRI dataset Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD), and the widely-used fMRI dataset PNC, prove the superior effectiveness and interpretability of FBNETGEN. The implementation is available at https://github.com/Wayfear/FBNETGEN.} }
Endnote
%0 Conference Paper %T FBNETGEN: Task-aware GNN-based fMRI Analysis via Functional Brain Network Generation %A Xuan Kan %A Hejie Cui %A Joshua Lukemire %A Ying Guo %A Carl Yang %B Proceedings of The 5th International Conference on Medical Imaging with Deep Learning %C Proceedings of Machine Learning Research %D 2022 %E Ender Konukoglu %E Bjoern Menze %E Archana Venkataraman %E Christian Baumgartner %E Qi Dou %E Shadi Albarqouni %F pmlr-v172-kan22a %I PMLR %P 618--637 %U https://proceedings.mlr.press/v172/kan22a.html %V 172 %X Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) is one of the most common imaging modalities to investigate brain functions. Recent studies in neuroscience stress the great potential of functional brain networks constructed from fMRI data for clinical predictions. Traditional functional brain networks, however, are noisy and unaware of downstream prediction tasks, while also incompatible with the deep graph neural network (GNN) models. In order to fully unleash the power of GNNs in network-based fMRI analysis, we develop FBNETGEN, a task-aware and interpretable fMRI analysis framework via deep brain network generation. In particular, we formulate (1) prominent region of interest (ROI) features extraction, (2) brain networks generation, and (3) clinical predictions with GNNs, in an end-to-end trainable model under the guidance of particular prediction tasks. Along with the process, the key novel component is the graph generator which learns to transform raw time-series features into task-oriented brain networks. Our learnable graphs also provide unique interpretations by highlighting prediction-related brain regions. Comprehensive experiments on two datasets, i.e., the recently released and currently largest publicly available fMRI dataset Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD), and the widely-used fMRI dataset PNC, prove the superior effectiveness and interpretability of FBNETGEN. The implementation is available at https://github.com/Wayfear/FBNETGEN.
APA
Kan, X., Cui, H., Lukemire, J., Guo, Y. & Yang, C.. (2022). FBNETGEN: Task-aware GNN-based fMRI Analysis via Functional Brain Network Generation. Proceedings of The 5th International Conference on Medical Imaging with Deep Learning, in Proceedings of Machine Learning Research 172:618-637 Available from https://proceedings.mlr.press/v172/kan22a.html.

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