Explainable fMRI-based Brain Decoding via Spatial Temporal-pyramid Graph Convolutional Network
Brain decoding, aiming to identify the brain states using neural activity, is important for cognitive neuroscience and neural engineering. However, existing machine learning methods for fMRI-based brain decoding either suffer from low classification performance or poor explainability. Here, we addre...
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Zusammenfassung: | Brain decoding, aiming to identify the brain states using neural activity, is
important for cognitive neuroscience and neural engineering. However, existing
machine learning methods for fMRI-based brain decoding either suffer from low
classification performance or poor explainability. Here, we address this issue
by proposing a biologically inspired architecture, Spatial Temporal-pyramid
Graph Convolutional Network (STpGCN), to capture the spatial-temporal graph
representation of functional brain activities. By designing multi-scale
spatial-temporal pathways and bottom-up pathways that mimic the information
process and temporal integration in the brain, STpGCN is capable of explicitly
utilizing the multi-scale temporal dependency of brain activities via graph,
thereby achieving high brain decoding performance. Additionally, we propose a
sensitivity analysis method called BrainNetX to better explain the decoding
results by automatically annotating task-related brain regions from the
brain-network standpoint. We conduct extensive experiments on fMRI data under
23 cognitive tasks from Human Connectome Project (HCP) S1200. The results show
that STpGCN significantly improves brain decoding performance compared to
competing baseline models; BrainNetX successfully annotates task-relevant brain
regions. Post hoc analysis based on these regions further validates that the
hierarchical structure in STpGCN significantly contributes to the
explainability, robustness and generalization of the model. Our methods not
only provide insights into information representation in the brain under
multiple cognitive tasks but also indicate a bright future for fMRI-based brain
decoding. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2210.05713 |