Partially-shared Imaging Regression on Integrating Heterogeneous Brain-Cognition Associations across Alzheimer's Diagnoses
Partially-shared Imaging Regression on Integrating Heterogeneous Brain-Cognition Associations across Alzheimer's Diagnoses
This paper is motivated by the heterogeneous associations among demographic covariates, imaging data, and cognitive performances across different diagnostic groups within the Alzheimer's Disease Neuroimaging Initiative (ADNI) study. We propose a novel PArtially-shared Imaging Regression (PAIR) model with smooth spatial component integration to capture heterogeneous imaging coefficients across multiple data sources. The model assumes that each imaging coefficient can be represented as a weighted combination of a set of smooth spatial components. Additionally, we apply a Total Variation (TV) penalty on each component to capture complex spatial patterns and introduce a Selective Integration Penalty (SIP) to adaptively learn the degree of partial-sharing among imaging coefficients. Applied to ADNI data, PAIR significantly improves predictive performance and uncovers distinct heterogeneous relationships. After adjusting for demographic covariates, hippocampal imaging minimally contributes to cognitive scores in the cognitively normal (CN) group but substantially in the cognitively impaired (CI) group. Furthermore, the effects of demographic covariates on cognitive scores remain stable among CN participants yet change notably for CI participants after imaging adjustment, suggesting hippocampal structural modulation. Imaging coefficient analysis reveals weak hippocampal signals in CN subjects, whereas prominent positive signals in CA1, CA3, and presubiculum subfields characterize the CI group. These analyses facilitate further investigation into functional mechanisms underlying Alzheimer's disease (AD) progression.
Yang Sui、Qi Xu、Ting Li、Yang Bai、Annie Qu
神经病学、精神病学医学研究方法
Yang Sui,Qi Xu,Ting Li,Yang Bai,Annie Qu.Partially-shared Imaging Regression on Integrating Heterogeneous Brain-Cognition Associations across Alzheimer's Diagnoses[EB/OL].(2025-05-30)[2025-06-28].https://arxiv.org/abs/2505.24259.点此复制
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