7 Tesla Quantitative MRI and Machine Learning for Exploratory Motor Subtype Stratification and Diagnosis in Parkinson's Disease
Pith reviewed 2026-06-30 14:19 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
Selected quantitative MRI features from 7T scans let machine learning separate Parkinson's motor subtypes with high accuracy in cross-validation.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
Deep-learning U-Net segmentation of quantitative 7T MRI maps followed by feature selection produced classifiers whose performance exceeded that of models using every extracted feature, reaching perfect accuracy and AUC on the postural instability/gait difficulty versus tremor-dominant task and supporting the feasibility of low-dimensional, interpretable signatures for diagnosis support and phenotype stratification.
What carries the argument
Optimal subset selection performed on quantitative MRI values extracted from U-Net-segmented brain regions; the step reduces feature count and raises cross-validated accuracy on the three classification tasks.
If this is right
- Low-dimensional imaging signatures become feasible for supporting objective motor-subtype assignment.
- Feature selection after deep-learning segmentation demonstrably improves classification over use of all features.
- Quantitative 7T maps combined with automatic segmentation can highlight differences between controls and the two motor phenotypes.
- The approach opens a route toward imaging-supported study design and personalized treatment planning in heterogeneous Parkinson's disease.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- If the signatures prove stable, clinical rating scales could be supplemented or partially replaced by objective imaging metrics.
- The same workflow might be tested on other movement disorders that also exhibit motor heterogeneity.
- Scanner harmonization studies would be needed before multi-site deployment of the selected features.
- Longitudinal scans could check whether the signatures track disease progression within each subtype.
Load-bearing premise
The 24 Parkinson's patients form a representative sample whose feature distributions will generalize, and feature selection on this cohort will not produce classifiers whose reported accuracies, especially the perfect score, will replicate on new data.
What would settle it
Running the same pipeline on an independent cohort of comparable size and finding that the selected-feature classifiers drop below 0.80 accuracy on the binary tasks would falsify the reported utility of the signatures.
read the original abstract
Parkinson's disease (PD) is a highly heterogeneous disease, including which motor symptoms are dominating. Imaging biomarkers that support subtype stratification could also improve biological understanding and study design, and enable personalized treatment strategies. This study evaluates whether deep-learning based automatic brain segmentation, in addition to quantitative maps from 7 Tesla MRI, can highlight differences between Healthy Controls (HC), Postural Instability and Gait Difficulty (PIGD) and Tremor Dominant (TD), and subsequently be used for objective PD stratification. The performance of machine learning classifiers may be improved with feature selection. 21 HC, and 24 people with PD (PwP) were included. The U-Net training was assessed with DSC. Two classification approaches using 5-fold cross-validation were defined across three tasks: (1) HC vs PwP; (2) PIGD vs TD; (3) multiclass, HC vs PIGD vs TD. Approach A used all extracted features. Approach B found the optimal subset of features for the classification tasks. The U-Net achieved mean DSC of 0.86 for all ROIs during training. Approach A: Task 1 best accuracy of 0.69 and best AUC of 0.73. Task 2 accuracy 0.69, AUC 0.90. Task 3 accuracy 0.62, AUC 0.66. Approach B: Task 1 accuracy of 0.82 and AUC of 0.93. Task 2 accuracy 1.00, AUC 1.00. Task 3 accuracy 0.73, AUC 0.91. DL-based segmentation combined with qMRI feature selection improved classification relative to using all features, supporting the potential of interpretable, low-dimensional imaging signatures for PD diagnosis support and phenotype stratification. Larger, multi-site studies are warranted to assess generalizability and stability.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The paper claims that deep-learning U-Net segmentation of 7T quantitative MRI maps, followed by machine-learning classification with feature selection (Approach B), improves performance over using all features (Approach A) across three tasks—HC vs PwP, PIGD vs TD, and multiclass—on a cohort of 21 HC and 24 PwP, yielding accuracies up to 0.82/1.00/0.73 and supporting low-dimensional interpretable imaging signatures for PD diagnosis and motor-subtype stratification.
Significance. If validated, the work would demonstrate a pipeline linking automated qMRI segmentation to phenotype stratification in a small PD cohort, potentially aiding biological subtyping; however, the reported gains rest on unverified feature-selection procedures whose stability on n=24 is unproven.
major comments (3)
- [Abstract / Methods (Approach B)] Abstract and Methods (Approach B description): Feature selection is described as finding 'the optimal subset of features for the classification tasks' prior to reporting 5-fold CV results, with no statement that selection occurs inside each training fold. On a total of 24 PD patients this procedure risks selecting sample-specific features, directly undermining the claim that Approach B improves classification (e.g., Task 2 accuracy rising from 0.69 to 1.00).
- [Results (classification performance)] Results (Task 2, PIGD vs TD): The reported accuracy of 1.00 and AUC of 1.00 after feature selection on only 24 patients is statistically implausible without external validation or nested cross-validation; this single result is load-bearing for the central claim of 'interpretable, low-dimensional imaging signatures.'
- [Methods (classification approaches)] Methods (cross-validation details): The manuscript provides no description of nested cross-validation, held-out test set, or baseline clinical classifiers, leaving the reported gains (Approach B vs A) without a control for selection bias on small N.
minor comments (2)
- [Abstract] Abstract: The sentence 'The U-Net achieved mean DSC of 0.86 for all ROIs during training' should clarify whether this is training or validation DSC and list the ROIs.
- [Methods] The total sample size (N=45) and the split between PIGD and TD subgroups should be stated explicitly in the Methods when describing the classification tasks.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the constructive comments highlighting important methodological concerns with our small-cohort study. We address each major comment below and commit to revisions that improve transparency and rigor without overstating the current results.
read point-by-point responses
-
Referee: [Abstract / Methods (Approach B)] Abstract and Methods (Approach B description): Feature selection is described as finding 'the optimal subset of features for the classification tasks' prior to reporting 5-fold CV results, with no statement that selection occurs inside each training fold. On a total of 24 PD patients this procedure risks selecting sample-specific features, directly undermining the claim that Approach B improves classification (e.g., Task 2 accuracy rising from 0.69 to 1.00).
Authors: We agree that the manuscript description is ambiguous and does not confirm feature selection occurred inside the CV folds. This is a valid concern for selection bias on n=24. In revision we will rewrite the Methods to specify nested cross-validation, with feature selection performed independently on each training fold only, and will recompute and report the revised performance metrics. revision: yes
-
Referee: [Results (classification performance)] Results (Task 2, PIGD vs TD): The reported accuracy of 1.00 and AUC of 1.00 after feature selection on only 24 patients is statistically implausible without external validation or nested cross-validation; this single result is load-bearing for the central claim of 'interpretable, low-dimensional imaging signatures.'
Authors: We acknowledge that perfect separation on this small subsample is likely inflated by the non-nested feature selection and should not be presented as robust evidence. In the revision we will replace the current Task 2 numbers with results from properly nested CV, add explicit caveats in Results and Discussion about small-sample instability, and soften the language around the signatures to reflect that they are exploratory. revision: yes
-
Referee: [Methods (classification approaches)] Methods (cross-validation details): The manuscript provides no description of nested cross-validation, held-out test set, or baseline clinical classifiers, leaving the reported gains (Approach B vs A) without a control for selection bias on small N.
Authors: We will expand the Methods to detail the nested CV procedure and state that a held-out test set was not used because of the limited total sample (n=45). We did not compare against clinical classifiers because the study focus was imaging-derived features; a brief note on this scope limitation will be added, but a full clinical baseline comparison is outside the current scope. revision: partial
Circularity Check
No significant circularity detected
full rationale
The paper presents empirical ML classification results (Approach A vs B) obtained via 5-fold cross-validation on a small cohort, with no equations, self-citations, or derivation chain that reduces a claimed result to its inputs by construction. Feature selection is described as one of two defined approaches within the CV tasks, but the text supplies no explicit statement that selection occurs outside the CV loop or that performance metrics are forced by the selection step itself. No load-bearing self-citation, ansatz smuggling, or renaming of known results appears. The reported accuracies are therefore treated as direct experimental outcomes rather than tautological outputs.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
free parameters (1)
- feature selection criterion and subset size
axioms (1)
- domain assumption U-Net segmentation produces ROIs whose quantitative values are reliable across subjects
Reference graph
Works this paper leans on
-
[1]
Clinical and Pathological Features of Parkinson’s Disease
Schneider SA, Obeso JA. Clinical and Pathological Features of Parkinson’s Disease. In: Nguyen HHP, Cenci MA, editors. Behavioral Neurobiology of Huntington’s Disease and Parkinson’s Disease. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer; 2015. p. 205–220. Availablefrom:https://doi.org/10.1007/7854_2014_317
-
[2]
Parkinson’s disease
Lees AJ, Hardy J, Revesz T. Parkinson’s disease. The Lancet. 2009 Jun;373(9680):2055–2066. Available from: https://www. sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S014067360960492X
2009
-
[3]
The Emerging Evidence of the Parkinson Pandemic
Dorsey ER, Sherer T, Okun MS, Bloem BR. The Emerging Evidence of the Parkinson Pandemic. Journal of Parkinson’s Disease.2018Dec;8(s1):S3–S8. Availablefrom:https://doi.org/10.3233/JPD-181474
-
[4]
TheclinicalheterogeneityofParkinson’sdiseaseanditstherapeuticimplica- tions
GreenlandJC,Williams-GrayCH,BarkerRA. TheclinicalheterogeneityofParkinson’sdiseaseanditstherapeuticimplica- tions. European Journal of Neuroscience. 2019;49(3):328–338. Available from: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10. 1111/ejn.14094
2019
-
[5]
Finding useful biomarkers for Parkinson’s disease.ScienceTranslationalMedicine.2018Aug;10(454):eaam6003.Availablefrom:https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/ scitranslmed.aam6003
Chen-Plotkin AS, Albin R, Alcalay R, Babcock D, Bajaj V, Bowman D, et al. Finding useful biomarkers for Parkinson’s disease.ScienceTranslationalMedicine.2018Aug;10(454):eaam6003.Availablefrom:https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/ scitranslmed.aam6003
-
[6]
Significance of MRI in Diagnosis and Differential Diagnosis of Parkinson’s Disease
Mahlknecht P, Hotter A, Hussl A, Esterhammer R, Schocke M, Seppi K. Significance of MRI in Diagnosis and Differential Diagnosis of Parkinson’s Disease. Neurodegenerative Diseases. 2010 Jul;7(5):300–318. Available from: https://doi.org/10. 1159/000314495
2010
-
[7]
Magnetic resonance imaging for the diagnosis of Parkinson’s disease
Heim B, Krismer F, De Marzi R, Seppi K. Magnetic resonance imaging for the diagnosis of Parkinson’s disease. Journal of NeuralTransmission.2017;124(8):915–964. Availablefrom:https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC5514207/
2017
-
[8]
Parkinson’s disease
Bloem BR, Okun MS, Klein C. Parkinson’s disease. The Lancet. 2021 Jun;397(10291):2284–2303. Available from: https: //www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S014067362100218X
2021
-
[9]
ThenganattMA,JankovicJ. ParkinsonDiseaseSubtypes. JAMANeurology.2014Apr;71(4):499–504. Availablefrom:https: //doi.org/10.1001/jamaneurol.2013.6233
-
[10]
Parkinson’s disease
Kalia LV, Lang AE. Parkinson’s disease. The Lancet. 2015 Aug;386(9996):896–912. Available from: https://www. sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0140673614613933
2015
-
[11]
EnhancingParkinson’sDiseaseDiagnosisthroughDeepLearning-BasedClas- sificationof3DMRIImages
DesaiS,ChhinkaniwalaH,ShahS,GajjarP. EnhancingParkinson’sDiseaseDiagnosisthroughDeepLearning-BasedClas- sificationof3DMRIImages. ProcediaComputerScience.2024Jan;235:201–213. Availablefrom:https://www.sciencedirect. com/science/article/pii/S1877050924006999
-
[12]
ClassificationofParkinson’sdiseaseusing3DConvolutionalNeuralNetworks (CNN)
ZubairM,FerranteM,DelGrattaC,ToschiN. ClassificationofParkinson’sdiseaseusing3DConvolutionalNeuralNetworks (CNN). Marseille, France; 2024. Available from: https://www.esmrmb2024.org/abstracts-form/posters-e/abstract-data/ 5c3ac5bc0f8b303c68cf6a912717c02f
2024
-
[13]
SyntheticMRIstudyofbrainvolumeandsubcorticalmyelininvarious Parkinson’sdiseasemotorsubtypes
ChengD,WenJ,DingN,DuanZ,LinB,YangY,etal. SyntheticMRIstudyofbrainvolumeandsubcorticalmyelininvarious Parkinson’sdiseasemotorsubtypes. npjParkinson’sDisease.2025Aug;11(1):255. Availablefrom:https://www.nature.com/ articles/s41531-025-01120-x
-
[14]
Distributionpatternofirondepositioninthebasalgangliaofdifferentmotor subtypes of Parkinson’s disease
ZhangX,LiL,QiL,FuY,SunD,ChenS,etal. Distributionpatternofirondepositioninthebasalgangliaofdifferentmotor subtypes of Parkinson’s disease. Neuroscience Letters. 2023 Jun;807:137249. Available from: https://www.sciencedirect. com/science/article/pii/S0304394023002082. 16of24
2023
-
[15]
Quantitative susceptibility mapping as an indicator of subcortical and limbic iron abnormality in Parkinson’s disease with dementia
Li DTH, Hui ES, Chan Q, Yao N, Chua SE, McAlonan GM, et al. Quantitative susceptibility mapping as an indicator of subcortical and limbic iron abnormality in Parkinson’s disease with dementia. NeuroImage: Clinical. 2018 Jan;20:365–373. Availablefrom:https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2213158218302407
2018
-
[16]
Brainirondepositionislinkedwithcognitive severity in Parkinson’s disease
ThomasGEC,LeylandLA,SchragAE,LeesAJ,Acosta-CabroneroJ,WeilRS. Brainirondepositionislinkedwithcognitive severity in Parkinson’s disease. Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery & Psychiatry. 2020 Apr;91(4):418–425. Available from: https://jnnp.bmj.com/content/91/4/418
2020
-
[17]
Availablefrom:https://doi.org/10.3233/JPD-150729
GuQ,ZhangH,XuanM,LuoW,HuangP,XiaS,etal.AutomaticClassificationonMulti-ModalMRIDataforDiagnosisofthe PosturalInstabilityandGaitDifficultySubtypeofParkinson’sDisease.JournalofParkinson’sDisease.2016Jun;6(3):545–556. Availablefrom:https://doi.org/10.3233/JPD-150729
-
[18]
Hosseini MS, Aghamiri SMR, Panahi M. Cross-regional radiomics: a novel framework for relationship-based feature ex- traction with validation in Parkinson’s disease motor subtyping. BioData Mining. 2025 Sep;18(1):67. Available from: https://doi.org/10.1186/s13040-025-00483-4
-
[19]
ExplainableclassificationofParkinson’sdiseasewithdifferentmotor subtypesbyanalyzingthesyntheticMRIquantitativeparametersofsubcorticalnuclei
ChengD,WenJ,LiuY,DingN,DuanZ,YangY,etal. ExplainableclassificationofParkinson’sdiseasewithdifferentmotor subtypesbyanalyzingthesyntheticMRIquantitativeparametersofsubcorticalnuclei. EuropeanJournalofRadiology.2025 Sep;190. Availablefrom:https://www.ejradiology.com/article/S0720-048X%2825%2900358-4/fulltext
2025
-
[20]
TheSTRAT-PARKcohort:Apersonalizedinitiative to stratify Parkinson’s disease
StigeKE,KvernengSU,SharmaS,SkeieGO,SheardE,SøgnenM,etal. TheSTRAT-PARKcohort:Apersonalizedinitiative to stratify Parkinson’s disease. Progress in Neurobiology. 2024 May;236:102603. Available from: https://www.sciencedirect. com/science/article/pii/S030100822400039X
2024
-
[21]
Stebbins GT, Goetz CG, Burn DJ, Jankovic J, Khoo TK, Tilley BC. How to identify tremor dominant and postural instabili- ty/gait difficulty groups with the movement disorder society unified Parkinson’s disease rating scale: Comparison with the unified Parkinson’s disease rating scale. Movement Disorders. 2013;28(5):668–670. Available from: https://onlineli...
-
[22]
MP2RAGE, a self bias-field corrected sequenceforimprovedsegmentationandT1-mappingathighfield
Marques JP, Kober T, Krueger G, van der Zwaag W, Van de Moortele PF, Gruetter R. MP2RAGE, a self bias-field corrected sequenceforimprovedsegmentationandT1-mappingathighfield. NeuroImage.2010Jan;49(2):1271–1281
-
[23]
ComputationallyEfficientCombinationofMulti- channelPhaseDataFromMulti-echoAcquisitions(ASPIRE)
EcksteinK,DymerskaB,BachrataB,BognerW,PoljancK,TrattnigS,etal. ComputationallyEfficientCombinationofMulti- channelPhaseDataFromMulti-echoAcquisitions(ASPIRE). MagneticResonanceinMedicine.2018Jun;79(6):2996–3006
-
[24]
Fastquantitativesusceptibilitymappingusing3D EPIandtotalgeneralizedvariation
LangkammerC,BrediesK,PoserBA,BarthM,ReishoferG,FanAP,etal. Fastquantitativesusceptibilitymappingusing3D EPIandtotalgeneralizedvariation. NeuroImage.2015May;111:622–630
-
[25]
Nighres: processing tools for high-resolution neuroimaging
Huntenburg JM, Steele CJ, Bazin PL. Nighres: processing tools for high-resolution neuroimaging. GigaScience. 2018 Jul;7(7):giy082. Availablefrom:https://doi.org/10.1093/gigascience/giy082
-
[26]
FastSurfer - A fast and accurate deep learning based neu- roimagingpipeline
Henschel L, Conjeti S, Estrada S, Diers K, Fischl B, Reuter M. FastSurfer - A fast and accurate deep learning based neu- roimagingpipeline. NeuroImage.2020Oct;219:117012. Availablefrom:https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/ S1053811920304985
-
[27]
FastSurferVINN:Buildingresolution-independenceintodeeplearningsegmentationmeth- ods—A solution for HighRes brain MRI
HenschelL,KüglerD,ReuterM. FastSurferVINN:Buildingresolution-independenceintodeeplearningsegmentationmeth- ods—A solution for HighRes brain MRI. NeuroImage. 2022 May;251:118933. Available from: https://www.sciencedirect. com/science/article/pii/S1053811922000623
2022
-
[28]
scikit-image:imageprocessinginPython
WaltSvd,SchönbergerJL,Nunez-IglesiasJ,BoulogneF,WarnerJD,YagerN,etal. scikit-image:imageprocessinginPython. PeerJ.2014Jun;2:e453. Availablefrom:https://peerj.com/articles/453
-
[29]
nnU-Net: a self-configuring method for deep learning-based biomedical image segmentation
Isensee F, Jaeger PF, Kohl SAA, Petersen J, Maier-Hein KH. nnU-Net: a self-configuring method for deep learning-based biomedical image segmentation. Nature Methods. 2021 Feb;18(2):203–211. Available from: https://www.nature.com/ articles/s41592-020-01008-z
2021
-
[30]
SPM12Software-StatisticalParametricMappingAvailablefrom:https://www.fil.ion.ucl.ac.uk/spm/software/spm12/
-
[31]
Availablefrom:http://jmlr.org/papers/v12/pedregosa11a.html
PedregosaF,VaroquauxG,GramfortA,MichelV,ThirionB,GriselO,etal.Scikit-learn:MachineLearninginPython.Journal ofMachineLearningResearch.2011;12(85):2825–2830. Availablefrom:http://jmlr.org/papers/v12/pedregosa11a.html
2011
-
[32]
XGBoost: A Scalable Tree Boosting System
Chen T, Guestrin C. XGBoost: A Scalable Tree Boosting System. In: Proceedings of the 22nd ACM SIGKDD International ConferenceonKnowledgeDiscoveryandDataMining;2016.p.785–794. Availablefrom:http://arxiv.org/abs/1603.02754
work page internal anchor Pith review Pith/arXiv arXiv 2016
-
[33]
Mining imaging and clinical data with machine learning approaches for the diagnosis and early detection of Parkinson’s disease
Zhang J. Mining imaging and clinical data with machine learning approaches for the diagnosis and early detection of Parkinson’s disease. npj Parkinson’s Disease. 2022 Jan;8(1):13. Available from: https://www.nature.com/articles/ s41531-021-00266-8. 17of24
2022
-
[34]
ATutorialonSupportVectorMachinesforPatternRecognition
BurgesCJC. ATutorialonSupportVectorMachinesforPatternRecognition. DataMiningandKnowledgeDiscovery.1998 Jun;2(2):121–167. Availablefrom:https://doi.org/10.1023/A:1009715923555
-
[35]
The parameter sensitivity of random forests
Huang BFF, Boutros PC. The parameter sensitivity of random forests. BMC Bioinformatics. 2016 Sep;17(1):331. Available from:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12859-016-1228-x
-
[36]
Digitalmedicineandthecurseofdimensionality
BerishaV,KrantsevichC,HahnPR,HahnS,DasarathyG,TuragaP,etal. Digitalmedicineandthecurseofdimensionality. npjDigitalMedicine.2021Oct;4(1):153. Availablefrom:https://www.nature.com/articles/s41746-021-00521-5
-
[37]
Quantitative susceptibility mapping in Parkinson’s disease
Langkammer C, Pirpamer L, Seiler S, Deistung A, Schweser F, Franthal S, et al. Quantitative susceptibility mapping in Parkinson’s disease. PLoS ONE. 2016;11(9). Available from: https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2. 0-84992374829&doi=10.1371%2fjournal.pone.0162460&partnerID=40&md5=a27c987b14555d0d2d473945daebae43
2016
-
[38]
Regionally progressive accumulation of iron in Parkinson’s disease as measured by quantitative susceptibility mapping
Guan X, Xuan M, Gu Q, Huang P, Liu C, Wang N, et al. Regionally progressive accumulation of iron in Parkinson’s disease as measured by quantitative susceptibility mapping. NMR in Biomedicine. 2017;30(4). Avail- able from: https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84975702009&doi=10.1002%2fnbm.3489&partnerID= 40&md5=1725c71633fdfdfdf110be1879bcd776
2017
-
[39]
Tan S, Hartono S, Welton T, Ann CN, Lim SL, Koh TS, et al. Utility of quantitative susceptibility map- ping and diffusion kurtosis imaging in the diagnosis of early Parkinson’s disease. NeuroImage: Clinical. 2021;32. Available from: https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85116354295&doi=10.1016%2fj.nicl.2021.102831& partnerID=40&md5=7e55227d7...
-
[40]
Different iron distribution patterns in Parkinson’s disease and its motor subtypes: a quantitative susceptibility mapping study
Zang S, Pan Y, Chen M, Zhang G. Different iron distribution patterns in Parkinson’s disease and its motor subtypes: a quantitative susceptibility mapping study. Acta Radiologica. 2025;66(1):99–106. Available from: https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85209914284&doi=10.1177%2f02841851241297207&partnerID= 40&md5=9eabf33fd0b71453882452fc805df2f1
2025
-
[41]
Evaluation of iron deposition in brain basal ganglia of patients with Parkinson’s disease using quantitative susceptibility mapping
Shahmaei V, Faeghi F, Mohammdbeigi A, Hashemi H, Ashrafi F. Evaluation of iron deposition in brain basal ganglia of patients with Parkinson’s disease using quantitative susceptibility mapping. European Journal of Radiology Open. 2019;6:169–174. Available from: https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85064746206&doi=10.1016%2fj. ejro.2019.04.00...
2019
-
[42]
Region-specific disturbed iron distribution in early idiopathic Parkinson’sdiseasemeasuredbyquantitativesusceptibilitymapping
He N, Ling H, Ding B, Huang J, Zhang Y, Zhang Z, et al. Region-specific disturbed iron distribution in early idiopathic Parkinson’sdiseasemeasuredbyquantitativesusceptibilitymapping. HumanBrainMapping.2015;36(11):4407–4420. Avail- able from: https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84955726895&doi=10.1002%2fhbm.22928&partnerID= 40&md5=fbf6e6285...
2015
-
[43]
Quantifying brain iron deposition in patients with Parkinson’s disease using quantitative susceptibility mapping, R2 and R2*
Barbosa JHO, Santos AC, Tumas V, Liu M, Zheng W, Haacke EM, et al. Quantifying brain iron deposition in patients with Parkinson’s disease using quantitative susceptibility mapping, R2 and R2*. Magnetic Resonance Imaging. 2015 Jun;33(5):559–565. Availablefrom:https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0730725X15000600
2015
-
[44]
Midbrain and pallidal iron changes identify patientswithREMsleepbehaviourdisorderandParkinson’sdisease
Alushaj E, Kuurstra A, Menon RS, Ganjavi H, Morava A, Sharma M, et al. Midbrain and pallidal iron changes identify patientswithREMsleepbehaviourdisorderandParkinson’sdisease. npjParkinson’sDisease.2025Apr;11(1):84. Available from:https://www.nature.com/articles/s41531-025-00916-1
-
[45]
Network Modeling Analysis in Health Informatics and Bioinformatics
AhmedYK,NajiANA.Smartfeatureextractionusingdeeplearningforearlydiagnosisofchronicdiseasesinnext-generation medical decision support systems. Network Modeling Analysis in Health Informatics and Bioinformatics. 2025;14(1):140. Availablefrom:https://doi.org/10.1007/s13721-025-00641-y
-
[46]
FeatureExtractionBasedonDeepLearningforSomeTraditionalMachineLearningMethods
ÇayirA,YenidoğanI,DağH. FeatureExtractionBasedonDeepLearningforSomeTraditionalMachineLearningMethods. In: 2018 3rd International Conference on Computer Science and Engineering (UBMK); 2018. p. 494–497. Available from: https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/abstract/document/8566383
-
[47]
Brammerloh M, Kirilina E, Alkemade A, Bazin PL, Jantzen C, Jäger C, et al. Swallow Tail Sign: Revisited. Radiology. 2022 Dec;305(3):674–677. Availablefrom:https://pubs.rsna.org/doi/full/10.1148/radiol.212696. 18of24 SupplementaryMaterial S.1 WorkflowforApproachB TheworkflowforobtainingthefeaturesforApproachB,optimalsubset,isshowninFigureS1forTask1:Healthy...
discussion (0)
Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.