Dynamic Modelling of Multivariate Dimensions and Their Temporal Relationships using Latent Processes: Application to Alzheimer's Disease
Bachirou O. Tadd\'e, H\'el\`ene Jacqmin-Gadda, Jean-Fran\c{c}ois, Dartigues, Daniel Commenges, C\'ecile Proust-Lima

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel dynamic structural model that captures the interconnected trajectories and temporal relationships of multiple latent dimensions in Alzheimer's disease, using discrete-time difference equations and multivariate markers.
Contribution
It develops an original model combining multivariate mixed models and difference equations to analyze multidimensional longitudinal data with causal interpretation.
Findings
Model successfully applied to Alzheimer's data showing distinct temporal patterns.
Simulation confirms the model's causal interpretability in discrete time.
Application reveals differences in disease progression across clinical stages.
Abstract
Alzheimer's disease gradually affects several components including the cerebral dimension with brain atrophies, the cognitive dimension with a decline in various functions and the functional dimension with impairment in the daily living activities. Understanding how such dimensions interconnect is crucial for AD research. However it requires to simultaneously capture the dynamic and multidimensional aspects, and to explore temporal relationships between dimensions. We propose an original dynamic structural model that accounts for all these features. The model defines dimensions as latent processes and combines a multivariate linear mixed model and a system of difference equations to model trajectories and temporal relationships between latent processes in finely discrete time. Dimensions are simultaneously related to their observed (possibly multivariate) markers through nonlinear…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDementia and Cognitive Impairment Research · Cognitive Science and Mapping
