Researcher profile

Vince Calhoun

Vince Calhoun contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

8 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

NeuroGAN-3D: Enhancing Intrinsic Functional Brain Networks via High-Fidelity 3D Generative Super-Resolution

Recent advances in neuroimaging have deepened our understanding of the brain's complex functional and structural organization. Among these, functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI) - particularly resting-state fMRI (rs-fMRI) - has emerged as a tool for identifying biomarkers of intrinsic brain connectivity and delineating large-scale neural networks. These networks are typically represented as volumetric spatial maps that capture functionally coherent brain regions and reflect individual differences in brain activity and structure. The spatial resolution of these maps plays an important role, as it determines the ability to localize functional units with precision, perform reliable brain parcellation, and detect subtle, spatially specific neurobiological alterations associated with development, aging, or disease. Therefore, improving the effective resolution of neuroimaging-derived maps holds significant promise for enabling more detailed insights into brain architecture and its relationship to behavior and pathology. To address this need, we propose NeuroGAN-3D, a novel 3D generative super-resolution model tailored to the computational demands of volumetric neuroimaging. Our model leverages a generative adversarial network architecture to enhance the spatial resolution of rs-fMRI spatial maps, significantly outperforming a conventional baseline.

preprint2026arXiv

SSFL: Discovering Sparse Unified Subnetworks at Initialization for Efficient Federated Learning

In this work, we propose Salient Sparse Federated Learning (SSFL), a streamlined approach for sparse federated learning with efficient communication. SSFL identifies a sparse subnetwork prior to training, leveraging parameter saliency scores computed separately on local client data in non-IID scenarios, and then aggregated, to determine a global mask. Only the sparse model weights are trained and communicated each round between the clients and the server. On standard benchmarks including CIFAR-10, CIFAR-100, and Tiny-ImageNet, SSFL consistently improves the accuracy sparsity trade off, achieving more than 20\% relative error reduction on CIFAR-10 compared to the strongest sparse baseline, while reducing communication costs by $2 \times$ relative to dense FL. Finally, in a real-world federated learning deployment, SSFL delivers over $2.3 \times$ faster communication time, underscoring its practical efficiency.

preprint2022arXiv

Brain dynamics via Cumulative Auto-Regressive Self-Attention

Multivariate dynamical processes can often be intuitively described by a weighted connectivity graph between components representing each individual time-series. Even a simple representation of this graph as a Pearson correlation matrix may be informative and predictive as demonstrated in the brain imaging literature. However, there is a consensus expectation that powerful graph neural networks (GNNs) should perform better in similar settings. In this work, we present a model that is considerably shallow than deep GNNs, yet outperforms them in predictive accuracy in a brain imaging application. Our model learns the autoregressive structure of individual time series and estimates directed connectivity graphs between the learned representations via a self-attention mechanism in an end-to-end fashion. The supervised training of the model as a classifier between patients and controls results in a model that generates directed connectivity graphs and highlights the components of the time-series that are predictive for each subject. We demonstrate our results on a functional neuroimaging dataset classifying schizophrenia patients and controls.

preprint2022arXiv

Explainable AI (XAI) in Biomedical Signal and Image Processing: Promises and Challenges

Artificial intelligence has become pervasive across disciplines and fields, and biomedical image and signal processing is no exception. The growing and widespread interest on the topic has triggered a vast research activity that is reflected in an exponential research effort. Through study of massive and diverse biomedical data, machine and deep learning models have revolutionized various tasks such as modeling, segmentation, registration, classification and synthesis, outperforming traditional techniques. However, the difficulty in translating the results into biologically/clinically interpretable information is preventing their full exploitation in the field. Explainable AI (XAI) attempts to fill this translational gap by providing means to make the models interpretable and providing explanations. Different solutions have been proposed so far and are gaining increasing interest from the community. This paper aims at providing an overview on XAI in biomedical data processing and points to an upcoming Special Issue on Deep Learning in Biomedical Image and Signal Processing of the IEEE Signal Processing Magazine that is going to appear in March 2022.

preprint2022arXiv

Multi network InfoMax: A pre-training method involving graph convolutional networks

Discovering distinct features and their relations from data can help us uncover valuable knowledge crucial for various tasks, e.g., classification. In neuroimaging, these features could help to understand, classify, and possibly prevent brain disorders. Model introspection of highly performant overparameterized deep learning (DL) models could help find these features and relations. However, to achieve high-performance level DL models require numerous labeled training samples ($n$) rarely available in many fields. This paper presents a pre-training method involving graph convolutional/neural networks (GCNs/GNNs), based on maximizing mutual information between two high-level embeddings of an input sample. Many of the recently proposed pre-training methods pre-train one of many possible networks of an architecture. Since almost every DL model is an ensemble of multiple networks, we take our high-level embeddings from two different networks of a model --a convolutional and a graph network--. The learned high-level graph latent representations help increase performance for downstream graph classification tasks and bypass the need for a high number of labeled data samples. We apply our method to a neuroimaging dataset for classifying subjects into healthy control (HC) and schizophrenia (SZ) groups. Our experiments show that the pre-trained model significantly outperforms the non-pre-trained model and requires $50\%$ less data for similar performance.

preprint2022arXiv

Spatio-temporally separable non-linear latent factor learning: an application to somatomotor cortex fMRI data

Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) data contain complex spatiotemporal dynamics, thus researchers have developed approaches that reduce the dimensionality of the signal while extracting relevant and interpretable dynamics. Models of fMRI data that can perform whole-brain discovery of dynamical latent factors are understudied. The benefits of approaches such as linear independent component analysis models have been widely appreciated, however, nonlinear extensions of these models present challenges in terms of identification. Deep learning methods provide a way forward, but new methods for efficient spatial weight-sharing are critical to deal with the high dimensionality of the data and the presence of noise. Our approach generalizes weight sharing to non-Euclidean neuroimaging data by first performing spectral clustering based on the structural and functional similarity between voxels. The spectral clusters and their assignments can then be used as patches in an adapted multi-layer perceptron (MLP)-mixer model to share parameters among input points. To encourage temporally independent latent factors, we use an additional total correlation term in the loss. Our approach is evaluated on data with multiple motor sub-tasks to assess whether the model captures disentangled latent factors that correspond to each sub-task. Then, to assess the latent factors we find further, we compare the spatial location of each latent factor to the motor homunculus. Finally, we show that our approach captures task effects better than the current gold standard of source signal separation, independent component analysis (ICA).

preprint2021arXiv

Improved Differentially Private Decentralized Source Separation for fMRI Data

Blind source separation algorithms such as independent component analysis (ICA) are widely used in the analysis of neuroimaging data. In order to leverage larger sample sizes, different data holders/sites may wish to collaboratively learn feature representations. However, such datasets are often privacy-sensitive, precluding centralized analyses that pool the data at a single site. In this work, we propose a differentially private algorithm for performing ICA in a decentralized data setting. Conventional approaches to decentralized differentially private algorithms may introduce too much noise due to the typically small sample sizes at each site. We propose a novel protocol that uses correlated noise to remedy this problem. We show that our algorithm outperforms existing approaches on synthetic and real neuroimaging datasets and demonstrate that it can sometimes reach the same level of utility as the corresponding non-private algorithm. This indicates that it is possible to have meaningful utility while preserving privacy.

preprint2019arXiv

Tracing Network Evolution Using the PARAFAC2 Model

Characterizing time-evolving networks is a challenging task, but it is crucial for understanding the dynamic behavior of complex systems such as the brain. For instance, how spatial networks of functional connectivity in the brain evolve during a task is not well-understood. A traditional approach in neuroimaging data analysis is to make simplifications through the assumption of static spatial networks. In this paper, without assuming static networks in time and/or space, we arrange the temporal data as a higher-order tensor and use a tensor factorization model called PARAFAC2 to capture underlying patterns (spatial networks) in time-evolving data and their evolution. Numerical experiments on simulated data demonstrate that PARAFAC2 can successfully reveal the underlying networks and their dynamics. We also show the promising performance of the model in terms of tracing the evolution of task-related functional connectivity in the brain through the analysis of functional magnetic resonance imaging data.