Abstract

BackgroundSelf-esteem is the individual evaluation of oneself. People with high self-esteem grade have mental health and can bravely cope with the threats from the environment. With the development of neuroimaging techniques, researches on cognitive neural mechanisms of self-esteem are increased. Existing methods based on brain morphometry and single-layer brain network cannot characterize the subtle structural differences related to self-esteem.MethodTo solve this issue, we proposed a multiple anatomical brain network based on multi-resolution region of interest (ROI) template to study the brain structural connections of self-esteem. The multiple anatomical brain network consists of ROI features and hierarchal brain network features that are extracted from structural MRI. For each layer, we calculated the correlation relationship between pairs of ROIs. In order to solve the high-dimensional problem caused by the large amount of network features, feature selection methods (t-test, mRMR, and SVM-RFE) are adopted to reduce the number of features while retaining discriminative information to the maximum extent. Multi-kernel SVM is employed to integrate the various types of features by appropriate weight coefficient.ResultThe experimental results show that the proposed method can improve classification accuracy to 97.26% compared with single-layer brain network.ConclusionsThe proposed method provides a new perspective for the analysis of brain structural differences of self-esteem, which also has potential guiding significance in other researches involved brain cognitive activity and brain disease diagnosis.

Highlights

  • Self-esteem is the individual evaluation of oneself

  • The proposed method provides a new perspective for the analysis of brain structural differences of self-esteem, which has potential guiding significance in other researches involved brain cognitive activity and brain disease diagnosis

  • Self-face recognition occurs in right brain, and autobiographical memory is mainly related to hippocampus, and self-reference is related to medial prefrontal lobe [5]

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Summary

Introduction

Self-esteem is the individual evaluation of oneself. People with high self-esteem grade have mental health and can bravely cope with the threats from the environment. Brain imaging studies suggest that self-esteem involves multiple psychological processes, including self in perception, memory, and introspection. These psychological processes have their own corresponding brain regions. Self-face recognition occurs in right brain, and autobiographical memory is mainly related to hippocampus, and self-reference is related to medial prefrontal lobe [5]. In addition to these independent brain regions, the difference in self-esteem is reflected in brain network connection. In this study, we focus on exploring the brain structural differences among undergraduates with different levels of self-esteem

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