Abstract

Effective detection of Alzheimer's disease (AD) is still difficult in clinical practice. Therefore, establishment of AD detection model by means of machine learning is of great significance to assist AD diagnosis. To investigate and test a new detection model aiming to help doctors diagnose AD more accurately. Diffusion tensor images and the corresponding T1w images acquired from subjects (AD = 98, normal control (NC) = 100) are used to construct brain networks. Then, 9 types features (198×90×9 in total) are extracted from the 3D brain networks by a graph theory method. Features with low correction in both groups are selected through the Pearson correlation analysis. Finally, the selected features (198×33, 198×26, 198×30, 198×42, 198×36, 198×23, 198×29, 198×14, 198×25) are separately used into train 3 machine learning classifier based detection models in which 60% of study subjects are used for training, 20% for validation and 20% for testing. The best detection accuracy levels of 3 models are 90%, 98% and 90% with the corresponding sensitivity of 92%, 96%, and 72% and specificity of 88%, 100% and 94% when using a random forest classifier trained with the Shortest Path Length (SPL) features (198×14), a support vector machine trained with the Degree Centrality features (198×33), and a convolution neural network trained with SPL features, respectively. This study demonstrates that the new method and models not only improve the accuracy of detecting AD, but also avoid bias caused by the method of direct dimensionality reduction from high dimensional data.

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