Deep learning for behaviour classification in a preclinical brain injury model.
Lucas TeohAchintha Avin IhalageSrooley HarpZahra F Al-KhateebAdina T Michael-TitusJordi L TremoledaYang HaoPublished in: PloS one (2022)
The early detection of traumatic brain injuries can directly impact the prognosis and survival of patients. Preceding attempts to automate the detection and the assessment of the severity of traumatic brain injury continue to be based on clinical diagnostic methods, with limited tools for disease outcomes in large populations. Despite advances in machine and deep learning tools, current approaches still use simple trends of statistical analysis which lack generality. The effectiveness of deep learning to extract information from large subsets of data can be further emphasised through the use of more elaborate architectures. We therefore explore the use of a multiple input, convolutional neural network and long short-term memory (LSTM) integrated architecture in the context of traumatic injury detection through predicting the presence of brain injury in a murine preclinical model dataset. We investigated the effectiveness and validity of traumatic brain injury detection in the proposed model against various other machine learning algorithms such as the support vector machine, the random forest classifier and the feedforward neural network. Our dataset was acquired using a home cage automated (HCA) system to assess the individual behaviour of mice with traumatic brain injury or non-central nervous system (non-CNS) injured controls, whilst housed in their cages. Their distance travelled, body temperature, separation from other mice and movement were recorded every 15 minutes, for 72 hours weekly, for 5 weeks following intervention. The HCA behavioural data was used to train a deep learning model, which then predicts if the animals were subjected to a brain injury or just a sham intervention without brain damage. We also explored and evaluated different ways to handle the class imbalance present in the uninjured class of our training data. We then evaluated our models with leave-one-out cross validation. Our proposed deep learning model achieved the best performance and showed promise in its capability to detect the presence of brain trauma in mice.
Keyphrases
- deep learning
- brain injury
- convolutional neural network
- machine learning
- traumatic brain injury
- artificial intelligence
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- cerebral ischemia
- big data
- randomized controlled trial
- neural network
- systematic review
- resting state
- spinal cord injury
- high fat diet induced
- white matter
- clinical trial
- stem cells
- type diabetes
- end stage renal disease
- social media
- ejection fraction
- prognostic factors
- real time pcr
- functional connectivity
- label free
- working memory
- insulin resistance
- wild type
- data analysis
- peritoneal dialysis
- sensitive detection
- mesenchymal stem cells
- bone marrow
- atomic force microscopy