A Brain Graph Foundation Model: Pre-Training and Prompt-Tuning for Any Atlas and Disorder
Wei, Xinxu, Zhao, Kanhao, Jiao, Yong, He, Lifang, Zhang, Yu
–arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence
As large language models (LLMs) continue to revolutionize AI research, there is a growing interest in building large-scale brain foundation models to advance neuroscience. While most existing brain foundation models are pre-trained on time-series signals or connectome features, we propose a novel graph-based pre-training paradigm for constructing a brain graph foundation model. In this paper, we introduce the Brain Graph Foundation Model, termed BrainGFM, a unified framework that leverages graph contrastive learning and graph masked autoencoders for large-scale fMRI-based pre-training. BrainGFM is pre-trained on a diverse mixture of brain atlases with varying parcellations, significantly expanding the pre-training corpus and enhancing the model's ability to generalize across heterogeneous fMRI-derived brain representations. To support efficient and versatile downstream transfer, we integrate both graph prompts and language prompts into the model design, enabling BrainGFM to flexibly adapt to a wide range of atlases, neurological and psychiatric disorders, and task settings. Furthermore, we employ meta-learning to optimize the graph prompts, facilitating strong generalization to previously unseen disorders under both few-shot and zero-shot learning conditions via language-guided prompting. BrainGFM is pre-trained on 27 neuroimaging datasets spanning 25 common neurological and psychiatric disorders, encompassing 2 types of brain atlases (functional and anatomical) across 8 widely-used parcellations, and covering over 25,000 subjects, 60,000 fMRI scans, and a total of 400,000 graph samples aggregated across all atlases and parcellations. The code is available at: https://github.com/weixinxu666/BrainGFM
arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence
Aug-5-2025
- Country:
- Asia > Japan (0.04)
- Europe > Netherlands
- North Holland > Amsterdam (0.04)
- North America > United States (0.28)
- Genre:
- Research Report > New Finding (1.00)
- Industry:
- Health & Medicine
- Diagnostic Medicine > Imaging (1.00)
- Health Care Technology (1.00)
- Therapeutic Area
- Neurology > Alzheimer's Disease (0.68)
- Psychiatry/Psychology (1.00)
- Health & Medicine
- Technology: