Longitudinal score prediction for Alzheimer’s disease based on ensemble correntropy and spatial–temporal constraint

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Abstract

Neuroimaging data has been widely used to predict clinical scores for automatic diagnosis of Alzheimer’s disease (AD). For accurate clinical score prediction, one of the major challenges is high feature dimension of the imaging data. To address this issue, this paper presents an effective framework using a novel feature selection model via sparse learning. In contrast to previous approaches focusing on a single time point, this framework uses information at multiple time points. Specifically, a regularized correntropy with the spatial–temporal constraint is used to reduce the adverse effect of noise and outliers, and promote consistent and robust selection of features by exploring data characteristics. Furthermore, ensemble learning of support vector regression (SVR) is exploited to accurately predict AD scores based on the selected features. The proposed approach is extensively evaluated on the Alzheimer’s disease neuroimaging initiative (ADNI) dataset. Our experiments demonstrate that the proposed approach not only achieves promising regression accuracy, but also successfully recognizes disease-related biomarkers.

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Lei, B., Hou, W., Zou, W., Li, X., Zhang, C., & Wang, T. (2019). Longitudinal score prediction for Alzheimer’s disease based on ensemble correntropy and spatial–temporal constraint. Brain Imaging and Behavior, 13(1), 126–137. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11682-018-9834-z

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