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Article Abstract

Studies in patients with brain lesions play a fundamental role in unraveling the brain's functional anatomy. Lesion-symptom mapping (LSM) techniques can relate lesion location to cognitive performance. However, a limitation of current LSM approaches is that they can only evaluate one cognitive outcome at a time, without considering interdependencies between different cognitive tests. To overcome this challenge, we implemented canonical correlation analysis (CCA) as combined multivariable and multioutcome LSM approach. We performed a proof-of-concept study on 1075 patients with acute ischemic stroke to explore whether addition of CCA to a multivariable single-outcome LSM approach (support vector regression) could identify infarct locations associated with deficits in three well-defined verbal memory functions (encoding, consolidation, retrieval) based on four verbal memory subscores derived from the Seoul Verbal Learning Test (immediate recall, delayed recall, recognition, learning ability). We evaluated whether CCA could extract cognitive score patterns that matched prior knowledge of these verbal memory functions, and if these patterns could be linked to more specific infarct locations than through single-outcome LSM alone. Two of the canonical modes identified with CCA showed distinct cognitive patterns that matched prior knowledge on encoding and consolidation. In addition, CCA revealed that each canonical mode was linked to a distinct infarct pattern, while with multivariable single-outcome LSM individual verbal memory subscores were associated with largely overlapping patterns. In conclusion, our findings demonstrate that CCA can complement single-outcome LSM techniques to help disentangle cognitive functions and their neuroanatomical correlates.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10028652PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/hbm.26208DOI Listing

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Article Synopsis
  • Studies of brain injuries help scientists understand how different parts of the brain work together and affect thinking skills.
  • A new method called canonical correlation analysis (CCA) was tested on over a thousand stroke patients to see if it could find connections between brain injury locations and specific memory tasks.
  • The results showed that CCA works better than older methods by revealing unique brain injury patterns linked to different memory skills, helping us learn more about how the brain functions.
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