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  1. Free, publicly-accessible full text available June 1, 2024
  2. With the advances in machine learning for the diagnosis of Alzheimer’s disease (AD), most studies have focused on either identifying the subject’s status through classification algorithms or on predicting their cognitive scores through regression methods, neglecting the potential association between these two tasks. Motivated by the need to enhance the prospects for early diagnosis along with the ability to predict future disease states, this study proposes a deep neural network based on modality fusion, kernelization, and tensorization that perform multiclass classification and longitudinal regression simultaneously within a unified multitask framework. This relationship between multiclass classification and longitudinal regression is found to boost the efficacy of the final model in dealing with both tasks. Different multimodality scenarios are investigated, and complementary aspects of the multimodal features are exploited to simultaneously delineate the subject’s label and predict related cognitive scores at future timepoints using baseline data. The main intent in this multitask framework is to consolidate the highest accuracy possible in terms of precision, sensitivity, F1 score, and area under the curve (AUC) in the multiclass classification task while maintaining the highest similarity in the MMSE score as measured through the correlation coefficient and the RMSE for all time points under the prediction task, with both tasks, run simultaneously under the same set of hyperparameters. The overall accuracy for multiclass classification of the proposed KTMnet method is 66.85 ± 3.77. The prediction results show an average RMSE of 2.32 ± 0.52 and a correlation of 0.71 ± 5.98 for predicting MMSE throughout the time points. These results are compared to state-of-the-art techniques reported in the literature. A discovery from the multitasking of this consolidated machine learning framework is that a set of hyperparameters that optimize the prediction results may not necessarily be the same as those that would optimize the multiclass classification. In other words, there is a breakpoint beyond which enhancing further the results of one process could lead to the downgrading in accuracy for the other. 
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  3. In this research, both image denoising and kidney segmentation tasks are addressed jointly via one multitask deep convolutional network. This multitasking scheme yields better results for both tasks compared to separate single-task methods. Also, to the best of our knowledge, this is a first time attempt at addressing these joint tasks in low-dose CT scans (LDCT). This new network is a conditional generative adversarial network (C-GAN) and is an extension of the image-to-image translation network. To investigate the generalized nature of the network, two other conventional single task networks are also exploited, including the well-known 2D UNet method for segmentation and the more recently proposed method WGAN for LDCT denoising. Implementation results proved that the proposed method outperforms UNet and WGAN for both tasks. 
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