A hierarchical Bayesian model to find brain-behaviour associations in incomplete data sets
Fabio S. Ferreira, Agoston Mihalik, Rick A. Adams, John Ashburner,, Janaina Mourao-Miranda

TL;DR
This paper introduces an extension of Group Factor Analysis (GFA), a hierarchical Bayesian model, to effectively find brain-behaviour associations in incomplete neuroimaging datasets, improving robustness and predictive capabilities.
Contribution
The paper presents a novel extension of GFA that handles missing data and demonstrates its effectiveness in uncovering brain-behaviour relationships in incomplete datasets.
Findings
GFA accurately predicted missing data in synthetic and real datasets.
Identified meaningful brain-behaviour associations in HCP data.
Predicted non-imaging measures from brain connectivity with high accuracy.
Abstract
Canonical Correlation Analysis (CCA) and its regularised versions have been widely used in the neuroimaging community to uncover multivariate associations between two data modalities (e.g., brain imaging and behaviour). However, these methods have inherent limitations: (1) statistical inferences about the associations are often not robust; (2) the associations within each data modality are not modelled; (3) missing values need to be imputed or removed. Group Factor Analysis (GFA) is a hierarchical model that addresses the first two limitations by providing Bayesian inference and modelling modality-specific associations. Here, we propose an extension of GFA that handles missing data, and highlight that GFA can be used as a predictive model. We applied GFA to synthetic and real data consisting of brain connectivity and non-imaging measures from the Human Connectome Project (HCP). In…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFunctional Brain Connectivity Studies · Mental Health Research Topics · Advanced Neuroimaging Techniques and Applications
