Skip to main content
  • SPS
    Members: Free
    IEEE Members: $11.00
    Non-members: $15.00
    Length: 14:04
04 May 2020

Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) is a high incidence of neurobehavioral disease in school-age children. Its neurobiological classification is meaningful for clinicians. The existing ADHD classification methods suffer from two problems, i.e., insufficient data and noise disturbance. Here, a high-accuracy classification method is proposed, which uses brain Functional Connectivity (FC) as material for ADHD feature analysis. In details, we introduce a binary hypothesis testing framework as the classification outline to cope with insufficient data of ADHD database. Under binary hypotheses, the FCs of test data are allowed to use for training and thus affect the subspace learning of training data. To overcome noise disturbance, an l21-norm LDA model is adopted to robustly learn ADHD features in subspaces. The subspace energies of training data under binary hypotheses are then calculated, and an energy-based comparison is finally performed to identify ADHD individuals. On the platform of ADHD-200 database, the experiments show our method outperforms other stateof- the-art methods with the significant average accuracy of 97.6%.

Value-Added Bundle(s) Including this Product

More Like This

  • SPS
    Members: $150.00
    IEEE Members: $250.00
    Non-members: $350.00
  • SPS
    Members: $150.00
    IEEE Members: $250.00
    Non-members: $350.00
  • SPS
    Members: $150.00
    IEEE Members: $250.00
    Non-members: $350.00