Many progressive disorders are characterized by unclear or transient diagnoses for specific subgroups of patients. Commonly used supervised pattern recognition methodology may not be the most suitable approach to deriving image-based biomarkers in such cases, as it relies on the availability of categorically labeled data (e.g., patients and controls). In this paper, we explore the potential of semi-supervised pattern classification to provide image-based biomarkers in the absence of precise diagnostic information for some individuals. We employ semi-supervised support vector machines (SVM) and apply them to the problem of classifying MR brain images of patients with uncertain diagnoses. We examine patterns in serial scans of ADNI participants with mild cognitive impairment (MCI), and propose that in the absence of sufficient follow-up evaluations of individuals with MCI, semi-supervised strategy is potentially more appropriate than the fully-supervised paradigm employed up to date.
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