Advanced Methods for Connectome-Based Predictive Modeling of Human Intelligence: A Novel Approach Based on Individual Differences in Cortical Topography
/ Authors
/ Abstract
Individual differences in human intelligence can be modeled and predicted from in vivo neurobiological connectivity. Many established modeling frameworks for predicting intelligence, however, discard higher-order information about individual differences in brain network topology, and show only moderate performance when generalized to make predictions in out-of-sample subjects. In this paper, we propose that connectome-based predictive modeling, a common predictive modeling framework for neuroscience data, can be productively modified to incor-porate information about brain network topology and individual differences via the incorporation of bagged decision trees and the network based statistic. These modi-fications produce a novel predictive modeling framework that leverages individual differences in cortical tractography to generate accurate regression predictions of intelligence scores. Network topology-based feature selection provides for natively interpretable networks as input features, increasing the model’s explainability. In-vestigating the proposed modeling framework’s efficacy, we find that advanced connectome-based predictive modeling generates neuroscience predictions that account for a significantly greater proportion of variance in general intelligence scores than previously established methods, advancing our scientific understanding of the network architecture that underlies human intelligence.