| Literature DB >> 25977807 |
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25977807 PMCID: PMC4412151 DOI: 10.1038/sdata.2014.57
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Data ISSN: 2052-4463 Impact factor: 6.444
Figure 1Linear Fascicle Evaluation (LiFE) an example of digital validation for human connectomes.
Diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging (dMRI) and fiber tractography allow in vivo mapping of human white-matter fascicles and connections. Tractography takes diffusion measurements as input and produces a large collection of white-matter fascicles as output, the connectome. The LiFE method evaluates the evidence in favor of different connectomes. LiFE takes full connectomes as inputs and predicts diffusion measurements as output. The difference between the measured and predicted diffusion is used to compute the connectome prediction error and the evidence in favor of a connectome. The prediction error is also used to evaluate the evidence supporting properties of the connectome such as the evidence for a tract or connection. (a) Building a forward model of diffusion data from a human connectome. Test data: a map of measured diffusion MRI modulation is presented in a typical coronal brain slice and for a single diffusion direction, left panel. Model: A whole brain connectome is estimated using fiber tractography and the Test data, middle panel. Prediction: LiFE uses the individual fascicles in the connectome to generate the predicted diffusion modulation in the same brain. Fascicles not contributing successfully to the Prediction are eliminated, right panel. (b) Evaluating the connectome model using the retest data and cross validation. Retest data: A map of a second measurement of diffusion MRI modulation made in the same individual brain and slice. The noise in the data introduces differences in the measured diffusion modulation, left panel. Visually compare Test and Retest data to appreciate the difference. Cross validation error: The Prediction and the Retest data are compared to evaluate the accuracy of the model, right panel. (c) Evaluating the evidence for the vertical occipital fasciculus. The neighborhood of fascicles belonging to the posterior portion of the connectome is overlaid on brain slices, left top panel, blue. The portion of the vertical occipital fasciculus (VOF) is identified in red, top middle panel. The VOF is shown with the rest of connectome fascicles passing through the same white matter region, right top panel, red and blue. To test the evidence in favor of the VOF, the fascicles in red are removed from the connectome model and the cross-validated prediction error is compared for the full connectome model (red and blue fascicles) and for the model without the VOF (blue fascicles alone). The cross-validated prediction error increases when the VOF is removed, bottom panel red, this indicates that the data offer evidence for the VOF. Portions of this figure have been adapted from Fig. 2 in ref. 15.