Document detail
ID

oai:arXiv.org:2410.24002

Topic
Electrical Engineering and Systems... Computer Science - Computer Vision...
Author
Nielsen, Milla E. Nielsen, Mads Ghazi, Mostafa Mehdipour
Category

Computer Science

Year

2024

listing date

11/6/2024

Keywords
features alzheimer disease learning
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Abstract

Alzheimer's disease (AD) is the leading cause of dementia, and its early detection is crucial for effective intervention, yet current diagnostic methods often fall short in sensitivity and specificity.

This study aims to detect significant indicators of early AD by extracting and integrating various imaging biomarkers, including radiomics, hippocampal texture descriptors, cortical thickness measurements, and deep learning features.

We analyze structural magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans from the Alzheimer's Disease Neuroimaging Initiative (ADNI) cohorts, utilizing comprehensive image analysis and machine learning techniques.

Our results show that combining multiple biomarkers significantly improves detection accuracy.

Radiomics and texture features emerged as the most effective predictors for early AD, achieving AUCs of 0.88 and 0.72 for AD and MCI detection, respectively.

Although deep learning features proved to be less effective than traditional approaches, incorporating age with other biomarkers notably enhanced MCI detection performance.

Additionally, our findings emphasize the continued importance of classical imaging biomarkers in the face of modern deep-learning approaches, providing a robust framework for early AD diagnosis.

;Comment: SPIE Medical Imaging (MI25)

Nielsen, Milla E.,Nielsen, Mads,Ghazi, Mostafa Mehdipour, 2024, Assessing the Efficacy of Classical and Deep Neuroimaging Biomarkers in Early Alzheimer's Disease Diagnosis

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