Female autism categorization using CNN based NeuroNet57 and ant colony optimization

IF 7 2区 医学 Q1 BIOLOGY
Adnan Ashraf , Qingjie Zhao , Waqas Haider Bangyal , Mudassar Raza , Mudassar Iqbal
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Autism identification and classification using biomedical medical image analysis has advanced recently. Research shows autistic females have different phenotypic and age-related brain variations than males. Gender-specific hormones and genes affect autistic female brain circuitry, unfortunately, female phenotypic and genotypic data is quite deficient. Since physicians spend much time in assessing autistic females manually. Advanced large-scale deep learning algorithms are in dire need of accurate medical diagnosis. This research proposed a 57-layer CNN architecture called NeuroNet57 that can extract features from fMRI factually. After pre-training on the Brain Tumour dataset, the NeuroNet57 model extracts female phenotypic features from autism brain imagining data exchange (ABIDE)-I+II datasets using T1 modality fMRI scans, resulting in feature matrices of 14372 × 4096 for ABIDE_I and 16168 × 4096 for ABIDE_II. Our model uses ant colony optimization (ACO) to select feature subsets for dimensionality reduction. Further, nine machine learning classifiers are used to categorize females with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) from females with control behavior. The KNN-based fineKNN (FKNN) classifier had 92.21% accuracy on ABIDE-I and 93.49% on ABIDE-II. This proves the effectiveness of our proposed model.

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来源期刊
Computers in biology and medicine
Computers in biology and medicine 工程技术-工程:生物医学
CiteScore
11.70
自引率
10.40%
发文量
1086
审稿时长
74 days
期刊介绍: Computers in Biology and Medicine is an international forum for sharing groundbreaking advancements in the use of computers in bioscience and medicine. This journal serves as a medium for communicating essential research, instruction, ideas, and information regarding the rapidly evolving field of computer applications in these domains. By encouraging the exchange of knowledge, we aim to facilitate progress and innovation in the utilization of computers in biology and medicine.
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