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There is growing interest in performing genome-wide searches for associations between genetic variants and brain imaging phenotypes. While much work has focused on single scalar valued summaries of brain phenotype, accounting for the richness of imaging data requires a brain-wide, genome-wide search. In particular, the standard approach based on mass-univariate linear modelling (MULM) does not account for the structured patterns of correlations present in each domain. In this work, we propose sparse reduced rank regression (sRRR), a strategy for multivariate modelling of high-dimensional imaging responses (measurements taken over regions of interest or individual voxels) and genetic covariates (single nucleotide polymorphisms or copy number variations), which enforces sparsity in the regression coefficients. Such sparsity constraints ensure that the model performs simultaneous genotype and phenotype selection. Using simulation procedures that accurately reflect realistic human genetic variation and imaging correlations, we present detailed evaluations of the sRRR method in comparison with the more traditional MULM approach. In all settings considered, sRRR has better power to detect deleterious genetic variants compared to MULM. Important issues concerning model selection and connections to existing latent variable models are also discussed. This work shows that sRRR offers a promising alternative for detecting brain-wide, genome-wide associations.

Original publication

DOI

10.1016/j.neuroimage.2010.07.002

Type

Journal article

Journal

NeuroImage

Publication Date

11/2010

Volume

53

Pages

1147 - 1159

Addresses

Statistics Section, Department of Mathematics, Imperial College London, UK.

Keywords

Alzheimer's Disease Neuroimaging Initiative, Brain, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Brain Mapping, Models, Statistical, Regression Analysis, ROC Curve, Genotype, Quantitative Trait, Heritable, Phenotype, Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide, Models, Neurological, Image Processing, Computer-Assisted, Genome-Wide Association Study