Learning-Guided Infinite Network Atlas Selection for Predicting Longitudinal Brain Network Evolution from a Single Observation

Author(s):  
Baha Eddine Ezzine ◽  
Islem Rekik
2021 ◽  
Vol 15 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ilias Rentzeperis ◽  
Cees van Leeuwen

Brain network connections rewire adaptively in response to neural activity. Adaptive rewiring may be understood as a process which, at its every step, is aimed at optimizing the efficiency of signal diffusion. In evolving model networks, this amounts to creating shortcut connections in regions with high diffusion and pruning where diffusion is low. Adaptive rewiring leads over time to topologies akin to brain anatomy: small worlds with rich club and modular or centralized structures. We continue our investigation of adaptive rewiring by focusing on three desiderata: specificity of evolving model network architectures, robustness of dynamically maintained architectures, and flexibility of network evolution to stochastically deviate from specificity and robustness. Our adaptive rewiring model simulations show that specificity and robustness characterize alternative modes of network operation, controlled by a single parameter, the rewiring interval. Small control parameter shifts across a critical transition zone allow switching between the two modes. Adaptive rewiring exhibits greater flexibility for skewed, lognormal connection weight distributions than for normally distributed ones. The results qualify adaptive rewiring as a key principle of self-organized complexity in network architectures, in particular of those that characterize the variety of functional architectures in the brain.


Author(s):  
Yusuke Ikemoto ◽  
◽  
Kosuke Sekiyama ◽  

Many biological and artifact networks often represent modular structures in which the network can be decomposed into several subnetworks. Here, we propose a simple model for the modular network evolution based on the nonlinear denoising in node activities. This model suggests that modular networks can evolve under certain conditions — if the stipulated goals for the networks or the input and target output pairs involve modular features, or if the signal transfer in a node is carried out in a nonlinear manner with respect to the saturation at the upper and lower bounds. Our model highlights the positive role played by noise in modular network evolution.


2017 ◽  
Vol 219 ◽  
pp. 483-493
Author(s):  
Xi Chen ◽  
Miao Wang ◽  
Jiping He ◽  
Wei Li

2021 ◽  
Vol 14 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gaoyan Zhang ◽  
Yuexuan Li ◽  
Xiaodong Zhang ◽  
Lixiang Huang ◽  
Yue Cheng ◽  
...  

Hepatic encephalopathy (HE) is a neurocognitive dysfunction based on metabolic disorders caused by severe liver disease, which has a high one-year mortality. Mild hepatic encephalopathy (MHE) has a high risk of converting to overt HE, and thus the accurate identification of MHE from cirrhosis with no HE (noHE) is of great significance in reducing mortality. Previously, most studies focused on studying abnormality in the static brain networks of MHE to find biomarkers. In this study, we aimed to use multi-layer modular algorithm to study abnormality in dynamic graph properties of brain network in MHE patients and construct a machine learning model to identify individual MHE from noHE. Here, a time length of 500-second resting-state functional MRI data were collected from 41 healthy subjects, 32 noHE patients and 30 MHE patients. Multi-layer modular algorithm was performed on dynamic brain functional connectivity graph. The connection-stability score was used to characterize the loyalty in each brain network module. Nodal flexibility, cohesion and disjointness were calculated to describe how the node changes the network affiliation across time. Results show that significant differences between MHE and noHE were found merely in nodal disjointness in higher cognitive network modules (ventral attention, fronto-parietal, default mode networks) and these abnormalities were associated with the decline in patients’ attention and visual memory function evaluated by Digit Symbol Test. Finally, feature extraction from node disjointness with the support vector machine classifier showed an accuracy of 88.71% in discrimination of MHE from noHE, which was verified by different window sizes, modular partition parameters and machine learning parameters. All these results show that abnormal nodal disjointness in higher cognitive networks during brain network evolution can be seemed as a biomarker for identification of MHE, which help us understand the disease mechanism of MHE at a fine scale.


PLoS ONE ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 8 (12) ◽  
pp. e82845 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wei Li ◽  
Yue Huang ◽  
Yapeng Li ◽  
Xi Chen

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