Contrastive machine learning reveals the structure of neuroanatomical variation within autism.

Journal: Science (New York, N.Y.)
Published Date:

Abstract

Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is highly heterogeneous. Identifying systematic individual differences in neuroanatomy could inform diagnosis and personalized interventions. The challenge is that these differences are entangled with variation because of other causes: individual differences unrelated to ASD and measurement artifacts. We used contrastive deep learning to disentangle ASD-specific neuroanatomical variation from variation shared with typical control participants. ASD-specific variation correlated with individual differences in symptoms. The structure of this ASD-specific variation also addresses a long-standing debate about the nature of ASD: At least in terms of neuroanatomy, individuals do not cluster into distinct subtypes; instead, they are organized along continuous dimensions that affect distinct sets of regions.

Authors

  • Aidas Aglinskas
    Department of Psychology and Neuroscience, Boston College, Boston, MA 02467, USA.
  • Joshua K Hartshorne
    Department of Psychology and Neuroscience, Boston College, Boston, MA 02467, USA.
  • Stefano Anzellotti
    Department of Psychology and Neuroscience, Boston College, Boston, MA 02467, USA.