4.6 Article

Predicting aphasia type from brain damage measured with structural MRI

Journal

CORTEX
Volume 73, Issue -, Pages 203-215

Publisher

ELSEVIER MASSON, CORP OFF
DOI: 10.1016/j.cortex.2015.09.005

Keywords

Chronic aphasia; Aphasia typology; Multivariate classification

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R01 DC009571]

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Chronic aphasia is a common consequence of a left-hemisphere stroke. Since the early insights by Broca and Wemicke, studying the relationship between the loci of cortical damage and patterns of language impairment has been one of the concerns of aphasiology. We utilized multivariate classification in a cross-validation framework to predict the type of chronic aphasia from the spatial pattern of brain damage. Our sample consisted of 98 patients with five types of aphasia (Broca's, Wernicke's, global, conduction, and anomic), classified based on scores on the Western Aphasia Battery (WAB). Binary lesion maps were obtained from structural MRI scans (obtained at least 6 months poststroke, and within 2 days of behavioural assessment); after spatial normalization, the lesions were parcellated into a disjoint set of brain areas. The proportion of damage to the brain areas was used to classify patients aphasia type. To create this parcellation, we relied on five brain atlases; our classifier (support vector machine SVM) could differentiate between different kinds of aphasia using any of the five parcellations. In our sample, the best classification accuracy was obtained when using a novel parcellation that combined two previously published brain atlases, with the first atlas providing the segmentation of grey matter, and the second atlas used to segment the white matter. For each aphasia type, we computed the relative importance of different brain areas for distinguishing it from other aphasia types; our findings were consistent with previously published reports of lesion locations implicated in different types of aphasia. Overall, our results revealed that automated multivariate classification could distinguish between aphasia types based on damage to atlasdefined brain areas. (C) 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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