- Browse by Author
Browsing by Author "Miller, Michael I."
Now showing 1 - 3 of 3
Results Per Page
Sort Options
Item Automatic comprehensive radiological reports for clinical acute stroke MRIs(Springer Nature, 2023-07-10) Liu, Chin-Fu; Zhao, Yi; Yedavalli, Vivek; Leigh, Richard; Falcao, Vito; STIR and VISTA Imaging investigators; Miller, Michael I.; Hillis, Argye E.; Faria, Andreia V.; Biostatistics and Health Data Science, School of MedicineBackground: Although artificial intelligence systems that diagnosis among different conditions from medical images are long term aims, specific goals for automation of human-labor, time-consuming tasks are not only feasible but equally important. Acute conditions that require quantitative metrics, such as acute ischemic strokes, can greatly benefit by the consistency, objectiveness, and accessibility of automated radiological reports. Methods: We used 1,878 annotated brain MRIs to generate a fully automated system that outputs radiological reports in addition to the infarct volume, 3D digital infarct mask, and the feature vector of anatomical regions affected by the acute infarct. This system is associated to a deep-learning algorithm for segmentation of the ischemic core and to parcellation schemes defining arterial territories and classically-identified anatomical brain structures. Results: Here we show that the performance of our system to generate radiological reports was comparable to that of an expert evaluator. The weight of the components of the feature vectors that supported the prediction of the reports, as well as the prediction probabilities are outputted, making the pre-trained models behind our system interpretable. The system is publicly available, runs in real time, in local computers, with minimal computational requirements, and it is readily useful for non-expert users. It supports large-scale processing of new and legacy data, enabling clinical and translational research. Conclusion: The generation of reports indicates that our fully automated system is able to extract quantitative, objective, structured, and personalized information from stroke MRIs.Item Identifying brain hierarchical structures associated with Alzheimer’s disease using a regularized regression method with tree predictors(Oxford University Press, 2023) Zhao, Yi; Wang, Bingkai; Liu, Chin-Fu; Faria, Andreia V.; Miller, Michael I.; Caffo, Brian S.; Luo, Xi; Biostatistics and Health Data Science, School of MedicineBrain segmentation at different levels is generally represented as hierarchical trees. Brain regional atrophy at specific levels was found to be marginally associated with Alzheimer’s disease outcomes. In this study, we propose an ℓ1-type regularization for predictors that follow a hierarchical tree structure. Considering a tree as a directed acyclic graph, we interpret the model parameters from a path analysis perspective. Under this concept, the proposed penalty regulates the total effect of each predictor on the outcome. With regularity conditions, it is shown that under the proposed regularization, the estimator of the model coefficient is consistent in ℓ2-norm and the model selection is also consistent. When applied to a brain sMRI dataset acquired from the Alzheimer’s Disease Neuroimaging Initiative (ADNI), the proposed approach identifies brain regions where atrophy in these regions demonstrates the declination in memory. With regularization on the total effects, the findings suggest that the impact of atrophy on memory deficits is localized from small brain regions, but at various levels of brain segmentation. Data used in preparation of this paper were obtained from the ADNI database.Item Regularized regression on compositional trees with application to MRI analysis(Oxford University Press, 2022) Wang, Bingkai; Caffo, Brian S.; Luo, Xi; Liu, Chin-Fu; Faria, Andreia V.; Miller, Michael I.; Zhao, Yi; Alzheimer’s Disease Neuroimaging Initiative; Biostatistics, School of Public HealthA compositional tree refers to a tree structure on a set of random variables where each random variable is a node and composition occurs at each non-leaf node of the tree. As a generalization of compositional data, compositional trees handle more complex relationships among random variables and appear in many disciplines, such as brain imaging, genomics and finance. We consider the problem of sparse regression on data that are associated with a compositional tree and propose a transformation-free tree-based regularized regression method for component selection. The regularization penalty is designed based on the tree structure and encourages a sparse tree representation. We prove that our proposed estimator for regression coefficients is both consistent and model selection consistent. In the simulation study, our method shows higher accuracy than competing methods under different scenarios. By analyzing a brain imaging data set from studies of Alzheimer's disease, our method identifies meaningful associations between memory decline and volume of brain regions that are consistent with current understanding.