Identifying Autism-Related Neurobiomarkers Using Hybrid Deep Learning Models

q-bio.NC arXiv:2510.13841
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Abstract

Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) has been associated with structural alterations across cortical and subcortical regions. Quantitative neuroimaging enables large-scale analysis of these neuroanatomical patterns. This project used structural MRI (T1-weighted) data from the publicly available ABIDE I dataset (n = 1,112) to classify ASD and control participants using a hybrid model. A 3D convolutional neural network (CNN) was trained to learn neuroanatomical feature representations, which were then passed to a support vector machine (SVM) for final classification. Gradient-weighted class activation mapping (Grad-CAM) was applied to the CNN to visualize the brain regions that contributed most to the model predictions. The Grad-CAM difference maps showed strongest relevance along cortical boundary regions, with additional emphasis in midline frontal-temporal-parietal areas, which is broadly consistent with prior ASD neuroimaging findings.

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