Probabilistic machine learning for the evaluation of presurgical language dominance.

Journal: Journal of neurosurgery
Published Date:

Abstract

OBJECTIVE Providing a reliable assessment of language lateralization is an important task to be performed prior to neurosurgery in patients with epilepsy. Over the last decade, functional MRI (fMRI) has emerged as a useful noninvasive tool for language lateralization, supplementing or replacing traditional invasive methods. In standard practice, fMRI-based language lateralization is assessed qualitatively by visual inspection of fMRI maps at a specific chosen activation threshold. The purpose of this study was to develop and evaluate a new computational technique for providing the probability of each patient to be left, right, or bilateral dominant in language processing. METHODS In 76 patients with epilepsy, a language lateralization index was calculated using the verb-generation fMRI task over a wide range of activation thresholds (from a permissive threshold, analyzing all brain regions, to a harsh threshold, analyzing only the strongest activations). The data were classified using a probabilistic logistic regression method. RESULTS Concordant results between fMRI and Wada lateralization were observed in 89% of patients. Bilateral and right-dominant groups showed similar fMRI lateralization patterns differentiating them from the left-dominant group but still allowing classification in 82% of patients. CONCLUSIONS These findings present the utility of a semi-supervised probabilistic learning approach for presurgical language-dominance mapping, which may be extended to other cognitive domains such as memory and attention.

Authors

  • Tomer Gazit
    Functional Brain Center.
  • Fani Andelman
    Functional Neurosurgery Unit, Department of Neurosurgery and.
  • Yifat Glikmann-Johnston
    Functional Brain Center.
  • Tal Gonen
    Functional Brain Center.
  • Aliya Solski
    Functional Brain Center.
  • Irit Shapira-Lichter
    Functional Brain Center.
  • Moran Ovadia
    Functional Brain Center.
  • Svetlana Kipervasser
    Functional Neurosurgery Unit, Department of Neurosurgery and.
  • Miriam Y Neufeld
    Department of Neurology, Tel Aviv Souraksy Medical Center;
  • Itzhak Fried
    Functional Neurosurgery Unit, Department of Neurosurgery and.
  • Talma Hendler
    Functional Brain Center.
  • Daniella Perry
    Functional Brain Center.