2014
DOI: 10.1002/hbm.22590
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Multivariate lesion-symptom mapping using support vector regression

Abstract: Lesion analysis is a classic approach to study brain functions. Because brain function is a result of coherent activations of a collection of functionally related voxels, lesion-symptom relations are generally contributed by multiple voxels simultaneously. Although voxel-based lesion symptom mapping (VLSM) has made substantial contributions to the understanding of brain-behavior relationships, a better understanding of the brain-behavior relationship contributed by multiple brain regions needs a multivariate l… Show more

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Cited by 258 publications
(461 citation statements)
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References 48 publications
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“…We (Zhang et al, 2014) developed SVR-LSM as a method for multivariate lesion-symptom mapping. In a typical whole-brain VLSM analysis the number of voxels (hundreds of thousands) is much greater than the number of patients (usually < 1000).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…We (Zhang et al, 2014) developed SVR-LSM as a method for multivariate lesion-symptom mapping. In a typical whole-brain VLSM analysis the number of voxels (hundreds of thousands) is much greater than the number of patients (usually < 1000).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Because the nonlinear transform contains interactive operations involving different voxels, it automatically takes the spatial correlations among voxels into account during model training, resulting in higher sensitivity for lesion-symptom relation detection as compared to a linear SVR-LSM as well as to VLSM (Zhang et al 2014). To locate the symptom-associated brain regions, the multivariate parametric map of the nonlinear SVR-LSM is projected back to the original brain space.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…This organization sug-gests that brain-behavior relationships could be better elucidated by applying multivariate, rather than univariate, analysis (Schmah et al, 2010; as supported by several fMRI studies: Misaki et al, 2010;. Lesion studies could also benefit from a multivariate approach (Smith et al, 2013;Mah et al, 2014;Yourganov et al, 2015;Zhang et al, 2014); instead of analyzing the effect of lesions in different locations independently, as is done in voxelwise lesion symptom mapping (VLSM; Bates et al, 2003), a multivariate method accounts for the interactions between spatial locations.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 91%