Functional connectome fingerprint of sleep quality in insomnia patients: Individualized out-of-sample prediction using machine learning
•Short-term and chronic insomnia are two subtypes of insomnia.•Functional connectome predicts individual sleep quality for both two subtypes.•Shared and distinct neural basis underlying poor sleep quality between two subtypes. Insomnia disorder has been reclassified into short-term/acute and chronic...
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Veröffentlicht in: | NeuroImage clinical 2020-01, Vol.28, p.102439-102439, Article 102439 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | •Short-term and chronic insomnia are two subtypes of insomnia.•Functional connectome predicts individual sleep quality for both two subtypes.•Shared and distinct neural basis underlying poor sleep quality between two subtypes.
Insomnia disorder has been reclassified into short-term/acute and chronic subtypes based on recent etiological advances. However, understanding the similarities and differences in the neural mechanisms underlying the two subtypes and accurately predicting the sleep quality remain challenging.
Using 29 short-term/acute insomnia participants and 44 chronic insomnia participants, we used whole-brain regional functional connectivity strength to predict unseen individuals’ Pittsburgh sleep quality index (PSQI), applying the multivariate relevance vector regression method. Evaluated using both leave-one-out and 10-fold cross-validation, the pattern of whole-brain regional functional connectivity strength significantly predicted an unseen individual’s PSQI in both datasets.
There were both similarities and differences in the regions that contributed the most to PSQI prediction between the two groups. Further functional connectivity analysis suggested that between-network connectivity was re-organized between short-term/acute insomnia and chronic insomnia.
The present study may have clinical value by informing the prediction of sleep quality and providing novel insights into the neural basis underlying the heterogeneity of insomnia. |
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ISSN: | 2213-1582 2213-1582 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.nicl.2020.102439 |