Abstract

Alzheimer’s disease is an incurable, progressive neurological brain disorder. Earlier detection of Alzheimer’s disease can help with proper treatment and prevent brain tissue damage. Several statistical and machine learning models have been exploited by researchers for Alzheimer’s disease diagnosis. Analyzing magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is a common practice for Alzheimer’s disease diagnosis in clinical research. Detection of Alzheimer’s disease is exacting due to the similarity in Alzheimer’s disease MRI data and standard healthy MRI data of older people. Recently, advanced deep learning techniques have successfully demonstrated human-level performance in numerous fields including medical image analysis. We propose a deep convolutional neural network for Alzheimer’s disease diagnosis using brain MRI data analysis. While most of the existing approaches perform binary classification, our model can identify different stages of Alzheimer’s disease and obtains superior performance for early-stage diagnosis. We conducted ample experiments to demonstrate that our proposed model outperformed comparative baselines on the Open Access Series of Imaging Studies dataset.

Highlights

  • Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is the most prevailing type of dementia

  • We developed a deep convolutional neural network that learned features directly from the input Structural MRI (sMRI) and eliminated the need for the handcrafted feature generation

  • We propose a deep convolutional neural network that can identify Alzheimer’s disease and classify the current disease stage

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Summary

Introduction

Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is the most prevailing type of dementia. The prevalence of AD is estimated to be around 5% after 65 years old and is staggering 30% for more than 85 years old in developed countries. Alzheimer’s disease destroys brain cells causing people to lose their memory, mental functions and ability to continue daily activities. Alzheimer’s disease affects the part of the brain that controls language and memory. AD patients suffer from memory loss, confusion and difficulty in speaking, reading or writing. They often forget about their life and may not recognize their family members. They struggle to perform daily activities such as brushing hair or combing tooth. All these make AD patients anxious or aggressive or to wander away from home. AD destroys the part of the brain controlling breathing and heart functionality which lead to death

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