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Hierarchical Fully Convolutional Network for Joint Atrophy Localization and Alzheimer's Disease Diagnosis Using Structural MRI

Authors
Lian, ChunfengLiu, MingxiaZhang, JunShen, Dinggang
Issue Date
4월-2020
Publisher
IEEE COMPUTER SOC
Keywords
Computer-aided alzheimer' s disease diagnosis; fully convolutional networks; discriminative atrophy localization; weakly-supervised learning; structural MRI
Citation
IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON PATTERN ANALYSIS AND MACHINE INTELLIGENCE, v.42, no.4, pp.880 - 893
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON PATTERN ANALYSIS AND MACHINE INTELLIGENCE
Volume
42
Number
4
Start Page
880
End Page
893
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/56835
DOI
10.1109/TPAMI.2018.2889096
ISSN
0162-8828
Abstract
Structural magnetic resonance imaging (sMRI) has been widely used for computer-aided diagnosis of neurodegenerative disorders, e.g., Alzheimer's disease (AD), due to its sensitivity to morphological changes caused by brain atrophy. Recently, a few deep learning methods (e.g., convolutional neural networks, CNNs) have been proposed to learn task-oriented features from sMRI for AD diagnosis, and achieved superior performance than the conventional learning-based methods using hand-crafted features. However, these existing CNN-based methods still require the pre-determination of informative locations in sMRI. That is, the stage of discriminative atrophy localization is isolated to the latter stages of feature extraction and classifier construction. In this paper, we propose a hierarchical fully convolutional network (H-FCN) to automatically identify discriminative local patches and regions in the whole brain sMRI, upon which multi-scale feature representations are then jointly learned and fused to construct hierarchical classification models for AD diagnosis. Our proposed H-FCN method was evaluated on a large cohort of subjects from two independent datasets (i.e., ADNI-1 and ADNI-2), demonstrating good performance on joint discriminative atrophy localization and brain disease diagnosis.
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