Predicting Space Radiation Single Ion Exposure in Rodents: A Machine Learning Approach

This study presents a data-driven machine learning approach to predict individual Galactic Cosmic Radiation (GCR) ion exposure for He-4, O-16, Si-28, Ti-48, or Fe-56 up to 150 mGy, based on Attentional Set-shifting (ATSET) experimental tests. The ATSET assay consists of a series of cognitive perform...

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Veröffentlicht in:Frontiers in systems neuroscience 2021-10, Vol.15, p.715433-715433, Article 715433
Hauptverfasser: Prelich, Matthew T., Matar, Mona, Gokoglu, Suleyman A., Gallo, Christopher A., Schepelmann, Alexander, Iqbal, Asad K., Lewandowski, Beth E., Britten, Richard A., Prabhu, R. K., Myers, Jerry G.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:This study presents a data-driven machine learning approach to predict individual Galactic Cosmic Radiation (GCR) ion exposure for He-4, O-16, Si-28, Ti-48, or Fe-56 up to 150 mGy, based on Attentional Set-shifting (ATSET) experimental tests. The ATSET assay consists of a series of cognitive performance tasks on irradiated male Wistar rats. The GCR ion doses represent the expected cumulative radiation astronauts may receive during a Mars mission on an individual ion basis. The primary objective is to synthesize and assess predictive models on a per-subject level through Machine Learning (ML) classifiers. The raw cognitive performance data from individual rodent subjects are used as features to train the models and to explore the capabilities of three different ML techniques for elucidating a range of correlations between received radiation on rodents and their performance outcomes. The analysis employs scores of selected input features and different normalization approaches which yield varying degrees of model performance. The current study shows that support vector machine, Gaussian naive Bayes, and random forest models are capable of predicting individual ion exposure using ATSET scores where corresponding Matthews correlation coefficients and F-1 scores reflect model performance exceeding random chance. The study suggests a decremental effect on cognitive performance in rodents due to
ISSN:1662-5137
1662-5137
DOI:10.3389/fnsys.2021.715433