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Autori principali: Gorriz, J. M., Segovia, F., Jimenez, C., Arco, J. E., Martinez, F. J., Ramirez, J, Abulikemu, S., Suckling, J.
Natura: Preprint
Pubblicazione: 2025
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Accesso online:https://arxiv.org/abs/2509.03675
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author Gorriz, J. M.
Segovia, F.
Jimenez, C.
Arco, J. E.
Martinez, F. J.
Ramirez, J
Abulikemu, S.
Suckling, J.
author_facet Gorriz, J. M.
Segovia, F.
Jimenez, C.
Arco, J. E.
Martinez, F. J.
Ramirez, J
Abulikemu, S.
Suckling, J.
contents This study introduces a deep learning framework for the inferential exploration of latent representations in 3D brain MRI, leveraging a simple convolutional autoencoder with a hierarchical encoder and a compact latent space. Trained on segmented gray matter images from the Alzheimer's Disease Neuroimaging Initiative (ADNI) dataset, the model learns latent representations that preserve neuroanatomical structure and reflect clinical variability across cognitive status. Dimensionality reduction techniques (PCA, t-SNE, PLS, UMAP) were applied to visualize and interpret the latent space, correlating it with anatomical regions defined by the AAL atlas. As a novel contribution, the Latent-Regional Correlation Profiling (LRCP) framework, which combines statistical association and supervised discriminability to identify brain regions that encode clinically relevant latent information is proposed. Our results show that even minimal architectures capture meaningful patterns associated with progression to Alzheimer's disease. Interpretability is assessed by applying SHAP-based regression to a post-hoc model that predicts reconstruction error from atlas-based regional gray matter intensities, thereby identifying anatomically meaningful regions involved in class-specific reconstruction strategies. These findings are further validated using statistical agnostic methods, highlighting the importance of rigorous evaluation in neuroimaging. This work demonstrates the potential of autoencoders as exploratory tools for biomarker discovery and hypothesis generation in clinical neuroscience.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2509_03675
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Latent space projections and atlases: A cautionary tale in deep neuroimaging using autoencoders
Gorriz, J. M.
Segovia, F.
Jimenez, C.
Arco, J. E.
Martinez, F. J.
Ramirez, J
Abulikemu, S.
Suckling, J.
Applications
This study introduces a deep learning framework for the inferential exploration of latent representations in 3D brain MRI, leveraging a simple convolutional autoencoder with a hierarchical encoder and a compact latent space. Trained on segmented gray matter images from the Alzheimer's Disease Neuroimaging Initiative (ADNI) dataset, the model learns latent representations that preserve neuroanatomical structure and reflect clinical variability across cognitive status. Dimensionality reduction techniques (PCA, t-SNE, PLS, UMAP) were applied to visualize and interpret the latent space, correlating it with anatomical regions defined by the AAL atlas. As a novel contribution, the Latent-Regional Correlation Profiling (LRCP) framework, which combines statistical association and supervised discriminability to identify brain regions that encode clinically relevant latent information is proposed. Our results show that even minimal architectures capture meaningful patterns associated with progression to Alzheimer's disease. Interpretability is assessed by applying SHAP-based regression to a post-hoc model that predicts reconstruction error from atlas-based regional gray matter intensities, thereby identifying anatomically meaningful regions involved in class-specific reconstruction strategies. These findings are further validated using statistical agnostic methods, highlighting the importance of rigorous evaluation in neuroimaging. This work demonstrates the potential of autoencoders as exploratory tools for biomarker discovery and hypothesis generation in clinical neuroscience.
title Latent space projections and atlases: A cautionary tale in deep neuroimaging using autoencoders
topic Applications
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2509.03675