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The study of healthy brain development helps to better understand the brain transformation and brain connectivity patterns which happen during childhood to adulthood. This study presents a sparse machine learning solution across whole-brain functional connectivity (FC) measures of three sets of data, derived from resting state functional magnetic resonance imaging (rs-fMRI) and task fMRI data, including a working memory n-back task (nb-fMRI) and an emotion identification task (em-fMRI). These multi-modal image data are collected on a sample of adolescents from the Philadelphia Neurodevelopmental Cohort (PNC) for the prediction of brain ages. Due to extremely large variable-to-instance ratio of PNC data, a high dimensional matrix with several irrelevant and highly correlated features is generated and hence a pattern learning approach is necessary to extract significant features. We propose a sparse learner based on the residual errors along the estimation of an inverse problem for the extreme learning machine (ELM) neural network. The purpose of the approach is to overcome the overlearning problem through pruning of several redundant features and their corresponding output weights. The proposed multimodal sparse ELM classifier based on residual errors (RES-ELM) is highly competitive in terms of the classification accuracy compared to its counterparts such as conventional ELM, and sparse Bayesian learning ELM.
Recently, a novel family of biologically plausible online algorithms for reducing the dimensionality of streaming data has been derived from the similarity matching principle. In these algorithms, the number of output dimensions can be determined ada
Efficient brain simulation is a scientific grand challenge, a parallel/distributed coding challenge and a source of requirements and suggestions for future computing architectures. Indeed, the human brain includes about 10^15 synapses and 10^11 neuro
Functional magnetic resonance imaging produces high dimensional data, with a less then ideal number of labelled samples for brain decoding tasks (predicting brain states). In this study, we propose a new deep temporal convolutional neural network arc
In this work, a dense recurrent convolutional neural network (DRCNN) was constructed to detect sleep disorders including arousal, apnea and hypopnea using Polysomnography (PSG) measurement channels provided in the 2018 Physionet challenge database. O
The properties of individual neurons are often analyzed in order to understand the biological and artificial neural networks in which theyre embedded. Class selectivity-typically defined as how different a neurons responses are across different class