Brain Sciences, Vol. 15, Pages 612: Hybrid Deep Learning Architecture with Adaptive Feature Fusion for Multi-Stage Alzheimer’s Disease Classification
Brain Sciences doi: 10.3390/brainsci15060612
Authors:
Ahmad Muhammad
Qi Jin
Osman Elwasila
Yonis Gulzar
Background/Objectives: Alzheimer’s disease (AD), a progressive neurodegenerative disorder, demands precise early diagnosis to enable timely interventions. Traditional convolutional neural networks (CNNs) and deep learning models often fail to effectively integrate localized brain changes with global connectivity patterns, limiting their efficacy in Alzheimer’s disease (AD) classification. Methods: This research proposes a novel deep learning framework for multi-stage Alzheimer’s disease (AD) classification using T1-weighted MRI scans. The adaptive feature fusion layer, a pivotal advancement, facilitates the dynamic integration of features extracted from a ResNet50-based CNN and a vision transformer (ViT). Unlike static fusion methods, our adaptive feature fusion layer employs an attention mechanism to dynamically integrate ResNet50’s localized structural features and vision transformer (ViT) global connectivity patterns, significantly enhancing stage-specific Alzheimer’s disease classification accuracy. Results: Evaluated on the Alzheimer’s 5-Class (AD5C) dataset comprising 2380 MRI scans, the framework achieves an accuracy of 99.42% (precision: 99.55%; recall: 99.46%; F1-score: 99.50%), surpassing the prior benchmark of 98.24% by 1.18%. Ablation studies underscore the essential role of adaptive feature fusion in minimizing misclassifications, while external validation on a four-class dataset confirms robust generalizability. Conclusions: This framework enables precise early Alzheimer’s disease (AD) diagnosis by integrating multi-scale neuroimaging features, empowering clinicians to optimize patient care through timely and targeted interventions.
Source link
Ahmad Muhammad www.mdpi.com