Dendritic ShuffleNetV2 Model for Alzheimer’s Disease Imaging Classification
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.30871/jaic.v9i4.9742Keywords:
Alzheimer’s Classification, Deep Learning, ShuffleNet, Dendritic Neural ModelAbstract
This study investigates the integration of a dendritic neural model (DNM) into the ShuffleNetV2 architecture to enhance Alzheimer’s stage classification from MRI scans. The proposed “Dendritic ShuffleNetV2” retains the original network’s computational cost (0.31 GFLOPs) while incurring only a 1.6% increase in parameter count (from 2.48 M to 2.52 M) and achieves faster convergence (15 epochs versus 22 epochs). Experiments were conducted on a four‑class Alzheimer’s MRI dataset comprising Non‑Demented, Very Mild Demented, Mild Demented, and Moderate Demented categories. Compared to the baseline ShuffleNetV2, the Dendritic variant yielded an average accuracy improvement of 0.79%, with corresponding gains of approximately 0.8% in weighted precision, recall, and F1‑score. Confusion matrix analysis revealed persistent overlap between the Very Mild and Mild Demented classes, although overall discrimination—particularly for the majority and early‑stage classes—remained robust. Training stability was maintained without significant overfitting.
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