| Literature DB >> 31274952 |
Farouk S Nathoo1, Linglong Kong2, Hongtu Zhu3.
Abstract
With the rapid growth of modern technology, many biomedical studies are being conducted to collect massive datasets with volumes of multi-modality imaging, genetic, neurocognitive, and clinical information from increasingly large cohorts. Simultaneously extracting and integrating rich and diverse heterogeneous information in neuroimaging and/or genomics from these big datasets could transform our understanding of how genetic variants impact brain structure and function, cognitive function, and brain-related disease risk across the lifespan. Such understanding is critical for diagnosis, prevention, and treatment of numerous complex brain-related disorders (e.g., schizophrenia and Alzheimer's disease). However, the development of analytical methods for the joint analysis of both high-dimensional imaging phenotypes and high-dimensional genetic data, a big data squared (BD2) problem, presents major computational and theoretical challenges for existing analytical methods. Besides the high-dimensional nature of BD2, various neuroimaging measures often exhibit strong spatial smoothness and dependence and genetic markers may have a natural dependence structure arising from linkage disequilibrium. We review some recent developments of various statistical techniques for imaging genetics, including massive univariate and voxel-wise approaches, reduced rank regression, mixture models, and group sparse multi-task regression. By doing so, we hope that this review may encourage others in the statistical community to enter into this new and exciting field of research.Entities:
Keywords: Group Sparse Regression; Multivariate High-Dimensional Regression; Neuroimaging Phenotype; Primary 62F15; Reduced Rank Regression MSC 2010; Single Nucleotide Polymorphism; secondary 62G10
Year: 2019 PMID: 31274952 PMCID: PMC6605768 DOI: 10.1002/cjs.11487
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Can J Stat ISSN: 0319-5724 Impact factor: 0.875