Title :
Multi-subject Bayesian Joint Detection and Estimation in fMRI
Author :
Badillo, Solveig ; Desmidt, Severine ; Ginisty, Chantal ; Ciuciu, Philippe
Author_Institution :
Parietal team, INRIA Saclay Ile-de-France, Gif-sur-Yvette, France
Abstract :
Modern cognitive experiments in functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI) rely on a cohort of subjects sampled from a population of interest to study characteristics of the healthy brain or to identify biomarkers on a specific pathology (e.g., Alzheimer´s disease) or disorder (e.g., ageing). Group-level studies usually proceed in two steps by making random-effect analysis on top of intra-subject analyses, to localize activated regions in response to stimulations or to estimate brain dynamics. Here, we focus on improving the accuracy of group-level inference of the hemodynamic response function (HRF). We rest on a existing Joint Detection-Estimation (JDE) framework which aims at detecting evoked activity and estimating HRF shapes jointly. So far, region-specific group-level HRFs have been captured by averaging intra-subject HRF profiles. Here, our approach extends the JDE formalism to the multi-subject context by proposing a hierarchical Bayesian modeling that includes an additional layer for describing the link between subject-specific and group-level HRFs. This extension outperforms the original approach both on artificial and real multi-subject datasets.
Keywords :
Bayes methods; auditory evoked potentials; biomedical MRI; brain; cognition; diseases; haemodynamics; medical disorders; visual evoked potentials; Alzheimer disease; ageing; biomarkers; brain dynamics; disorder; evoked activity; fMRI; functional magnetic resonance imaging; group-level HRF; group-level inference; healthy brain; hemodynamic response function; hierarchical Bayesian modeling; intrasubject analyses; modern cognitive experiments; multisubject Bayesian joint detection; multisubject Bayesian joint estimation; pathology; population-of-interest; subject sampling; subject-specific HRF; Estimation; Hemodynamics; Hidden Markov models; Robustness; Senior citizens; Shape; Signal to noise ratio; Bayesian inference; Hemodynamic estimation; Joint Detection Estimation; multi-subject fMRI studies;
Conference_Titel :
Pattern Recognition in Neuroimaging, 2014 International Workshop on
Conference_Location :
Tubingen
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4799-4150-6
DOI :
10.1109/PRNI.2014.6858508