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 detrended partial cross correlation



Reviews: Detrended Partial Cross Correlation for Brain Connectivity Analysis

Neural Information Processing Systems

In this work, the authors describe the use of detrended partial cross correlation (DPCCA) as a quantity to capture short and long memory connections among brain recordings, for connectivity analysis. DPPCA is complemented with CCA to study the efficacy of detecting connectivity on simulated data (generated with NatSim), and compared to partial correlation and regularized inverse covriance (ICOV). On real fMRI data, DPCCA is first used together with PCA to show representative correlation profiles and perform dimensionality reduction (with Isomap (Iso) and autoencorder (AutoE)). Second, various combinations of DPCCA values and dimensionality reduction methods are used as feature for predicting cocaine dependent class from control. The paper is sufficiently well written and most parts is described in enough detail to reproduce the technical steps of the proposed methodology. I appreciate the use of DPCCA which is definitely new to the neuroimaging data analysis domain.



Detrended Partial Cross Correlation for Brain Connectivity Analysis

Ide, Jaime, Cappabianco, Fábio, Faria, Fabio, Li, Chiang-shan R.

Neural Information Processing Systems

Brain connectivity analysis is a critical component of ongoing human connectome projects to decipher the healthy and diseased brain. Recent work has highlighted the power-law (multi-time scale) properties of brain signals; however, there remains a lack of methods to specifically quantify short- vs. long- time range brain connections. In this paper, using detrended partial cross-correlation analysis (DPCCA), we propose a novel functional connectivity measure to delineate brain interactions at multiple time scales, while controlling for covariates. We use a rich simulated fMRI dataset to validate the proposed method, and apply it to a real fMRI dataset in a cocaine dependence prediction task. We show that, compared to extant methods, the DPCCA-based approach not only distinguishes short and long memory functional connectivity but also improves feature extraction and enhances classification accuracy.


Detrended Partial Cross Correlation for Brain Connectivity Analysis

Ide, Jaime, Cappabianco, Fábio, Faria, Fabio, Li, Chiang-shan R.

Neural Information Processing Systems

Brain connectivity analysis is a critical component of ongoing human connectome projects to decipher the healthy and diseased brain. Recent work has highlighted the power-law (multi-time scale) properties of brain signals; however, there remains a lack of methods to specifically quantify short- vs. long- time range brain connections. In this paper, using detrended partial cross-correlation analysis (DPCCA), we propose a novel functional connectivity measure to delineate brain interactions at multiple time scales, while controlling for covariates. We use a rich simulated fMRI dataset to validate the proposed method, and apply it to a real fMRI dataset in a cocaine dependence prediction task. We show that, compared to extant methods, the DPCCA-based approach not only distinguishes short and long memory functional connectivity but also improves feature extraction and enhances classification accuracy. Together, this paper contributes broadly to new computational methodologies in understanding neural information processing.