Literature DB >> 29251253

Permutations of functional magnetic resonance imaging classification may not be normally distributed.

Mohammed S Al-Rawi1,2, Adelaide Freitas3, João V Duarte2, Joao P Cunha4,5, Miguel Castelo-Branco1,2.   

Abstract

A fundamental question that often occurs in statistical tests is the normality of distributions. Countless distributions exist in science and life, but one distribution that is obtained via permutations, usually referred to as permutation distribution, is interesting. Although a permutation distribution should behave in accord with the central limit theorem, if both the independence condition and the identical distribution condition are fulfilled, no studies have corroborated this concurrence in functional magnetic resonance imaging data. In this work, we used Anderson-Darling test to evaluate the accordance level of permutation distributions of classification accuracies to normality expected under central limit theorem. A simulation study has been carried out using functional magnetic resonance imaging data collected, while human subjects responded to visual stimulation paradigms. Two scrambling schemes are evaluated: the first based on permuting both the training and the testing sets and the second on permuting only the testing set. The results showed that, while a normal distribution does not adequately fit to permutation distributions most of the times, it tends to be quite well acceptable when mean classification accuracies averaged over a set of different classifiers is considered. The results also showed that permutation distributions can be probabilistically affected by performing motion correction to functional magnetic resonance imaging data, and thus may weaken the approximation of permutation distributions to a normal law. Such findings, however, have no relation to univariate/univoxel analysis of functional magnetic resonance imaging data. Overall, the results revealed a strong dependence across the folds of cross-validation and across functional magnetic resonance imaging runs and that may hinder the reliability of using cross-validation. The obtained p-values and the drawn confidence level intervals exhibited beyond doubt that different permutation schemes may beget different permutation distributions as well as different levels of accord with central limit theorem. We also found that different permutation schemes can lead to different permutation distributions and that may lead to different assessment of the statistical significance of classification accuracy.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Anderson–Darling test; Permutation testing; central limit theorem; classification analysis; normality

Mesh:

Year:  2017        PMID: 29251253     DOI: 10.1177/0962280215601707

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Stat Methods Med Res        ISSN: 0962-2802            Impact factor:   3.021


  1 in total

1.  The Curative Effect of Pregabalin in the Treatment of Postherpetic Neuralgia Analyzed by Deep Learning-Based Brain Resting-State Functional Magnetic Resonance Images.

Authors:  Shumao Zheng; Mingjun Lei; Fan Bai; Zan Tian; Hua Wang
Journal:  Contrast Media Mol Imaging       Date:  2022-05-10       Impact factor: 3.009

  1 in total

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