Machine learning patterns for neuroimaging-genetic studies in the cloud

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Abstract

Brain imaging is a natural intermediate phenotype to understand the link between genetic information and behavior or brain pathologies risk factors. Massive efforts have been made in the last few years to acquire high-dimensional neuroimaging and genetic data on large cohorts of subjects. The statistical analysis of such data is carried out with increasingly sophisticated techniques and represents a great computational challenge. Fortunately, increasing computational power in distributed architectures can be harnessed, if new neuroinformatics infrastructures are designed and training to use these new tools is provided. Combining a MapReduce framework (TomusBLOB) with machine learning algorithms (Scikit-learn library), we design a scalable analysis tool that can deal with non-parametric statistics on high-dimensional data. End-users describe the statistical procedure to perform and can then test the model on their own computers before running the very same code in the cloud at a larger scale. We illustrate the potential of our approach on real data with an experiment showing how the functional signal in subcortical brain regions can be significantly fit with genome-wide genotypes. This experiment demonstrates the scalability and the reliability of our framework in the cloud with a 2 weeks deployment on hundreds of virtual machines. © 2014 Da Mota, Tudoran, Costan, Varoquaux, Brasche, Conrod, Lemaitre, Paus, Rietschel, Frouin, Poline, Antoniu, Thirion and IMAGEN Consortium.

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APA

Da Mota, B., Tudoran, R., Costan, A., Varoquaux, G., Brasche, G., Conrod, P., … Thirion, B. (2014). Machine learning patterns for neuroimaging-genetic studies in the cloud. Frontiers in Neuroinformatics, 8(APR). https://doi.org/10.3389/fninf.2014.00031

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