Decoding with confidence: Statistical control on decoder maps.

Journal: NeuroImage
Published Date:

Abstract

In brain imaging, decoding is widely used to infer relationships between brain and cognition, or to craft brain-imaging biomarkers of pathologies. Yet, standard decoding procedures do not come with statistical guarantees, and thus do not give confidence bounds to interpret the pattern maps that they produce. Indeed, in whole-brain decoding settings, the number of explanatory variables is much greater than the number of samples, hence classical statistical inference methodology cannot be applied. Specifically, the standard practice that consists in thresholding decoding maps is not a correct inference procedure. We contribute a new statistical-testing framework for this type of inference. To overcome the statistical inefficiency of voxel-level control, we generalize the Family Wise Error Rate (FWER) to account for a spatial tolerance δ, introducing the δ-Family Wise Error Rate (δ-FWER). Then, we present a decoding procedure that can control the δ-FWER: the Ensemble of Clustered Desparsified Lasso (EnCluDL), a procedure for multivariate statistical inference on high-dimensional structured data. We evaluate the statistical properties of EnCluDL with a thorough empirical study, along with three alternative procedures including decoder map thresholding. We show that EnCluDL exhibits the best recovery properties while ensuring the expected statistical control.

Authors

  • Jérôme-Alexis Chevalier
    Parietal project-team, Inria Saclay-Ile de France, Palaiseau, France; CEA/Neurospin bat 145, Gif-Sur-Yvette, France; Université Paris-Saclay, Gif-Sur-Yvette, France. Electronic address: jerome-alexis.chevalier@inria.fr.
  • Tuan-Binh Nguyen
    Parietal project-team, Inria Saclay-Ile de France, Palaiseau, France; CEA/Neurospin bat 145, Gif-Sur-Yvette, France; Université Paris-Saclay, Gif-Sur-Yvette, France; LMO, Université Paris-Saclay, Orsay, France.
  • Joseph Salmon
    IMAG, Université de Montpellier, CNRS, Montpellier, France.
  • Gael Varoquaux
    Parietal, INRIA, NeuroSpin, bat 145 CEA Saclay, 91191, Gif sur Yvette, France.
  • Bertrand Thirion
    Parietal, Inria, Université Paris-Saclay, Gif-sur-Yvette, France.