TE-HI-GCN: An Ensemble of Transfer Hierarchical Graph Convolutional Networks for Disorder Diagnosis

Neuroinformatics. 2022 Apr;20(2):353-375. doi: 10.1007/s12021-021-09548-1. Epub 2021 Nov 11.

Abstract

Accurate diagnosis of psychiatric disorders plays a critical role in improving the quality of life for patients and potentially supports the development of new treatments. Graph convolutional networks (GCNs) are shown to be successful in modeling applications with graph structures. However, training an accurate GCNs model for brain networks faces several challenges, including high dimensional and noisy correlation in the brain networks, limited labeled training data, and depth limitation of GCN learning. Generalization and interpretability are important in developing predictive models for clinical diagnosis. To address these challenges, we proposed an ensemble framework involving hierarchical GCN and transfer learning for sparse brain networks, which allows GCN to capture the intrinsic correlation among the subjects and domains, to improve the network embedding learning for disease diagnosis. Extensive experiments on two real medical clinical applications: diagnosis of Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and diagnosis of Alzheimer's disease (AD) on both the ADNI and ABIDE databases, showing the effectiveness of the proposed framework. We achieved state-of-the-art accuracy and AUC for AD/MCI and ASD/NC (Normal control) classification in comparison with studies that used functional connectivity as features or GCN models. The proposed TE-HI-GCN model achieves the best classification performance, leading to about 27.93% (31.38%) improvement for ASD and 16.86% (44.50%) for AD in terms of accuracy and AUC compared with the traditional GCN model. Moreover, the obtained clustering results show high correspondence with the previous neuroimaging derived evidence of within and between-networks biomarkers for ASD. The discovered subnetworks are used as evidence for the proposed TE-HI-GCN model. Furthermore, this work is the first attempt of transfer learning on the two related disorder domains to uncover the correlation among the two diseases with a transfer learning scheme.

Keywords: Brain network; Disorder disease diagnosis; Graph convolutional networks; Resting-state fMRI; Transfer learning.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Alzheimer Disease*
  • Autism Spectrum Disorder* / diagnostic imaging
  • Humans
  • Neural Networks, Computer
  • Neuroimaging / methods
  • Quality of Life