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Bahram Jafrasteh

Bahram Jafrasteh contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

2 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

Network-Aware Bilinear Tokenization for Brain Functional Connectivity Representation Learning

Masked autoencoders (MAEs) have recently shown promise for self-supervised representation learning of resting-state brain functional connectivity (FC). However, a fundamental question remains unresolved: how should FC matrices be tokenized to align with the intrinsic modular organization of large-scale brain networks? Existing approaches typically adopt region-centric or graph-based schemes that treat FC as structurally homogeneous elements and overlook the large-scale network brain organization. We introduce NERVE (Network-Aware Representations of Brain Functional Connectivity via Bilinear Tokenization), a self-supervised learning framework that redefines FC tokenization by partitioning FC matrices into patches of intra- and inter-network connectivity blocks. Unlike image-based MAE, where fixed-size patches share a common tokenizer, FC patches defined by network pairs are heterogeneous in size and correspond to distinct functional roles. To resolve this problem, NERVE embeds FC patches through a novel structured bilinear factorization. This formulation preserves network identity and reduces parameter complexity from quadratic to linear scaling in the number of networks. We evaluate NERVE across three large-scale developmental cohorts (ABCD, PNC, and CCNP) for behavior and psychopathology prediction. Compared to structurally agnostic MAE variants and graph-based self-supervised baselines, the proposed network-aware formulation yields more stable and transferable representations, particularly in cross-cohort evaluation. Ablation studies confirm that the proposed bilinear network embedding and anatomically grounded parcellation are critical for performance. These findings highlight the importance of incorporating domain-specific structural priors into self-supervised learning for functional connectomics. Code is available at: https://github.com/leomlck/NERVE.

preprint2022arXiv

Gaussian Processes for Missing Value Imputation

Missing values are common in many real-life datasets. However, most of the current machine learning methods can not handle missing values. This means that they should be imputed beforehand. Gaussian Processes (GPs) are non-parametric models with accurate uncertainty estimates that combined with sparse approximations and stochastic variational inference scale to large data sets. Sparse GPs can be used to compute a predictive distribution for missing data. Here, we present a hierarchical composition of sparse GPs that is used to predict missing values at each dimension using all the variables from the other dimensions. We call the approach missing GP (MGP). MGP can be trained simultaneously to impute all observed missing values. Specifically, it outputs a predictive distribution for each missing value that is then used in the imputation of other missing values. We evaluate MGP in one private clinical data set and four UCI datasets with a different percentage of missing values. We compare the performance of MGP with other state-of-the-art methods for imputing missing values, including variants based on sparse GPs and deep GPs. The results obtained show a significantly better performance of MGP.