Abstract
Pain is highly subjective, so it is always desirable to develop objective pain assessment methods. Brain imaging techniques, such as functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), have the potential to provide a physiological and quantitative pain assessment tool. However, the ultra-high-dimensional fMRI data and the nonlinear relationship between fMRI and pain greatly degrade the efficiency of fMRI-based pain decoding models. In this paper, a novel pain decoding model is proposed based on the whale optimization algorithm (WOA), reinforcement learning (RL), and self-organizing fuzzy logic (SOFL), namely RLWOA-SOFL. The new non-linear WOA method incorporates RL and repository experiences (RE), which is based on a back-propagation neural network (BPNN) to map a set of agents states to appropriate actions, to extract and select features that are highly predictive of pain. More specifically, the proposed RLWOA is self-learning and self-optimizing so it can deal with the high-dimensional and complex fMRI data. On the other hand, to establish a fMRI-based pain decoding model, a novel SOFL method is proposed as a new type of deep fuzzy rule that can learn continuously from new data and identify prototypes to construct fuzzy rules. The proposed RLWOA-SOFL model is applied to real-world pain-evoked fMRI data, and the results show that the new model can decode pain intensity more accurately and can identify pain-related fMRI patterns more reliably. Therefore, the proposed RLWOA-SOFL model has great potential to evaluate the intensity of pain perception in clinical uses.
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