Computing and Information Systems - Research Publications

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    A cautionary note on the use of SIFT in pathological connectomes
    Zalesky, A ; Sarwar, T ; Ramamohanarao, K (WILEY, 2020-03)
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    Mapping connectomes with diffusion MRI: deterministic or probabilistic tractography?
    Sarwar, T ; Ramamohanarao, K ; Zalesky, A (WILEY, 2019-02)
    PURPOSE: Human connectomics necessitates high-throughput, whole-brain reconstruction of multiple white matter fiber bundles. Scaling up tractography to meet these high-throughput demands yields new fiber tracking challenges, such as minimizing spurious connections and controlling for gyral biases. The aim of this study is to determine which of the two broadest classes of tractography algorithms-deterministic or probabilistic-is most suited to mapping connectomes. METHODS: This study develops numerical connectome phantoms that feature realistic network topologies and that are matched to the fiber complexity of in vivo diffusion MRI (dMRI) data. The phantoms are utilized to evaluate the performance of tensor-based and multi-fiber implementations of deterministic and probabilistic tractography. RESULTS: For connectome phantoms that are representative of the fiber complexity of in vivo dMRI, multi-fiber deterministic tractography yields the most accurate connectome reconstructions (F-measure = 0.35). Probabilistic algorithms are hampered by an abundance of false-positive connections, leading to lower specificity (F = 0.19). While omitting connections with the fewest number of streamlines (thresholding) improves the performance of probabilistic algorithms (F = 0.38), multi-fiber deterministic tractography remains optimal when it benefits from thresholding (F = 0.42). CONCLUSIONS: Multi-fiber deterministic tractography is well suited to connectome mapping, while connectome thresholding is essential when using probabilistic algorithms.
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    Towards deep learning for connectome mapping: A block decomposition framework
    Sarwar, T ; Seguin, C ; Ramamohanarao, K ; Zalesky, A (ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE, 2020-05-15)
    We propose a new framework to map structural connectomes using deep learning and diffusion MRI. We show that our framework not only enables connectome mapping with a convolutional neural network (CNN), but can also be straightforwardly incorporated into conventional connectome mapping pipelines to enhance accuracy. Our framework involves decomposing the entire brain volume into overlapping blocks. Blocks are sufficiently small to ensure that a CNN can be efficiently trained to predict each block's internal connectivity architecture. We develop a block stitching algorithm to rebuild the full brain volume from these blocks and thereby map end-to-end connectivity matrices. To evaluate our block decomposition and stitching (BDS) framework independent of CNN performance, we first map each block's internal connectivity using conventional streamline tractography. Performance is evaluated using simulated diffusion MRI data generated from numerical connectome phantoms with known ground truth connectivity. Due to the redundancy achieved by allowing blocks to overlap, we find that our block decomposition and stitching steps per se can enhance the accuracy of probabilistic and deterministic tractography algorithms by up to 20-30%. Moreover, we demonstrate that our framework can improve the strength of structure-function coupling between in vivo diffusion and functional MRI data. We find that structural brain networks mapped with deep learning correlate more strongly with functional brain networks (r ​= ​0.45) than those mapped with conventional tractography (r ​= ​0.36). In conclusion, our BDS framework not only enables connectome mapping with deep learning, but its two constituent steps can be straightforwardly incorporated as part of conventional connectome mapping pipelines to enhance accuracy.