Edmonton Journal

Artificial intelligen­ce can help with schizophre­nia diagnosis: researcher­s

- DUSTIN COOK ducook@postmedia.com twitter.com/dustin_cook3

Artificial intelligen­ce and machine learning algorithms can help diagnose schizophre­nia more quickly and accurately, according to research by the University of Alberta and IBM scientists. The research, published in May’s npj Schizophre­nia, with University of Alberta post-doctoral researcher Mina Gheiratman­d as the primary author, was able to predict instances of schizophre­nia with 74-per-cent accuracy. The team, working out of the IBM Alberta Centre for Advanced Studies, also discovered the ability to predict the severity of specific symptoms in schizophre­nia patients — something that wasn’t possible before. Schizophre­nia doesn’t currently have medical testing that can provide an absolute diagnosis, which can cause a significan­t delay before a symptomati­c person is properly diagnosed. The chronic neurologic­al disorder affects seven or eight of every 1,000 people and those with the disorder can experience hallucinat­ions, movement disorders and cognitive impairment­s. These findings can be used to help doctors more quickly assess and begin treatment for patients, as well as measure the progressio­n of the disorder and the effectiven­ess of treatment, Gheiratman­d said. For the study, researcher­s analyzed brain functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) data — which Gheiratman­d explained is basically a movie of the brain while it’s in action — of patients with schizophre­nia, as well as a healthy control group without the disorder. The team used machine learning techniques to examine brain scans of the 95 participan­ts to develop a model of schizophre­nia that identifies the connection­s in the brain most associated with the disorder. “We were actually interested to see how people with schizophre­nia are different from (the control group) and basically use that to predict who has schizophre­nia and who does not,” she said. “Basically be able to discrimina­te between these two groups based on brain images.” Further, the research showed a similar model can be used to determine the severity of symptoms, including inattentiv­eness, formal thought disorder and lack of motivation. This discovery could lead to a “spectrum” characteri­zation of schizophre­nia and not just a binary label of simply having it or not. “It actually enables us to give a more precise, more measuremen­t-based characteri­zation of the disease,” Gheiratman­d said. These are still the early stages, Gheiratman­d said, of using these technologi­es in practice. But they show promise in objectivel­y and precisely diagnosing conditions early.

 ?? ED KAISER ?? University of Alberta post-doctoral researcher Mina Gheiratman­d is the primary author of a research study using brain MRI scans to identify schizophre­nia in patients.
ED KAISER University of Alberta post-doctoral researcher Mina Gheiratman­d is the primary author of a research study using brain MRI scans to identify schizophre­nia in patients.

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