We present a computational framework for image-based statistical
analysis of anatomical image data in different populations.
Applications of such analysis include understanding developmental and
anatomical aspects of disorders when comparing patients vs. normal
controls, studying morphological changes caused by aging, or even
differences in normal anatomy, for example, differences between
genders.
Once a quantitative description of anatomy is extracted from input
images, the problem of identifying differences between the two groups
can be reduced to one of the classical questions in machine learning,
namely constructing a classifier function for assigning new examples
to one of the two groups while making as few mistakes as possible. In
the traditional classification setting, the resulting classifier is
rarely analyzed in terms of the properties of the input data that are
captured by the discriminative model. In contrast, interpretation of
the statistical model in the original input domain is an important
component of image-based analysis. We introduce a novel approach to
such interpretation that yields detailed descriptions of the detected
differences in anatomically meaningful terms of organ development and
deformation.
Estimating statistical significance of the detected differences
between the two groups of images is a challenging problem due to high
dimensionality of data and a relatively small number of training
examples. We demonstrate a non-parametric technique, based on
permutation testing, for estimation of statistical significance in the
context of discriminative analysis. This approach provides a weaker
statistical guarantee than the classical convergence bounds, but is
nevertheless useful in applications of machine learning that involve a
large number of highly correlated features and a limited number of
training examples. Example domains that give rise to such problems
include view-based object recognition, text classification, gene
expression analysis.
We demonstrate the proposed analysis framework on several examples of
studies of changes in the brain anatomy due to healthy aging and
disorders, as well as of brain activation in response to visual
stimuli.
Date and Time
Monday April 21, 2003 4:00pm -
5:30pm
Location
Computer Science Small Auditorium (Room 105)
Event Type
Speaker
Polina Golland, from MIT AI Lab
Host
Thomas Funkhouser