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Javid Dadashkarimi

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About

Biography

I’m Javid Dadashkarimi, a Ph.D. candidate in the computer science department at Yale University. I’m grateful to work with Dustin Scheinost and Amin Karbasi in my Ph.D. I am working on a data harmonization problem where connectomes derived from functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) are released in different resolutions through given brain atlases. Due to privacy issues, individuals may not agree to release their data in a raw form, which limits the usability of your brain-behavior association models. We recently launched CAROT, an optimization technique that enables us to estimate functional connectomes in the target atlas:   http://carotproject.com

For more information, you can visit http://dadashkarimi.github.io or http://www.dadashkarimi.com.

Appointments

Departments & Organizations

Education & Training

PhD
Yale University, computer science (2023)
MSc
University of Tehran, Electrical and Software Engineering (2015)
BSc
University of Tehran, Electrical and Software Engineering (2012)

Research

Overview

Whether using large-scale projects---like the Human Connectome Project (HCP), the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) study, Healthy Brain Network (HBN), and the UK Biobank---or pooling together several smaller studies, open-source, publicly available datasets allow for unprecedented sample sizes and promote generalization efforts. Overall, releasing preprocessing data can enhance participant privacy, democratize science, and lead to unique scientific discoveries. But releasing preprocessed data also limits the choices available to the end-user. For connectomics, this is especially true as connectomes created from different atlases (i.e., ways of dividing the brain into distinct regions) are not directly comparable. In addition, there exist several atlases with no gold standards, and more being developed yearly, making it unrealistic to have processed, open-source data available from all atlases. To address these limitations, as part of my PhD with Dustin Scheinost --MINDS lab -- and Amin Karbasi -- IID lab --, we propose Cross Atlas Remapping via Optimal Transport (CAROT) to find a mapping between two atlases, allowing data processed from one atlas to be directly transformed into a connectome based on another atlas without needing raw data.

Research at a Glance

Yale Co-Authors

Frequent collaborators of Javid Dadashkarimi's published research.

Publications

2024

2022

2021

Academic Achievements & Community Involvement

  • honor

    Best Paper Award

  • honor

    Brain Initiative Trainee Award

  • honor

    Best Poster Award