28,026 research outputs found
Machine Learning and Integrative Analysis of Biomedical Big Data.
Recent developments in high-throughput technologies have accelerated the accumulation of massive amounts of omics data from multiple sources: genome, epigenome, transcriptome, proteome, metabolome, etc. Traditionally, data from each source (e.g., genome) is analyzed in isolation using statistical and machine learning (ML) methods. Integrative analysis of multi-omics and clinical data is key to new biomedical discoveries and advancements in precision medicine. However, data integration poses new computational challenges as well as exacerbates the ones associated with single-omics studies. Specialized computational approaches are required to effectively and efficiently perform integrative analysis of biomedical data acquired from diverse modalities. In this review, we discuss state-of-the-art ML-based approaches for tackling five specific computational challenges associated with integrative analysis: curse of dimensionality, data heterogeneity, missing data, class imbalance and scalability issues
Large-Scale Online Semantic Indexing of Biomedical Articles via an Ensemble of Multi-Label Classification Models
Background: In this paper we present the approaches and methods employed in
order to deal with a large scale multi-label semantic indexing task of
biomedical papers. This work was mainly implemented within the context of the
BioASQ challenge of 2014. Methods: The main contribution of this work is a
multi-label ensemble method that incorporates a McNemar statistical
significance test in order to validate the combination of the constituent
machine learning algorithms. Some secondary contributions include a study on
the temporal aspects of the BioASQ corpus (observations apply also to the
BioASQ's super-set, the PubMed articles collection) and the proper adaptation
of the algorithms used to deal with this challenging classification task.
Results: The ensemble method we developed is compared to other approaches in
experimental scenarios with subsets of the BioASQ corpus giving positive
results. During the BioASQ 2014 challenge we obtained the first place during
the first batch and the third in the two following batches. Our success in the
BioASQ challenge proved that a fully automated machine-learning approach, which
does not implement any heuristics and rule-based approaches, can be highly
competitive and outperform other approaches in similar challenging contexts
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Prediction of microbial communities for urban metagenomics using neural network approach.
BACKGROUND:Microbes are greatly associated with human health and disease, especially in densely populated cities. It is essential to understand the microbial ecosystem in an urban environment for cities to monitor the transmission of infectious diseases and detect potentially urgent threats. To achieve this goal, the DNA sample collection and analysis have been conducted at subway stations in major cities. However, city-scale sampling with the fine-grained geo-spatial resolution is expensive and laborious. In this paper, we introduce MetaMLAnn, a neural network based approach to infer microbial communities at unsampled locations given information reflecting different factors, including subway line networks, sampling material types, and microbial composition patterns. RESULTS:We evaluate the effectiveness of MetaMLAnn based on the public metagenomics dataset collected from multiple locations in the New York and Boston subway systems. The experimental results suggest that MetaMLAnn consistently performs better than other five conventional classifiers under different taxonomic ranks. At genus level, MetaMLAnn can achieve F1 scores of 0.63 and 0.72 on the New York and the Boston datasets, respectively. CONCLUSIONS:By exploiting heterogeneous features, MetaMLAnn captures the hidden interactions between microbial compositions and the urban environment, which enables precise predictions of microbial communities at unmeasured locations
A Comparative Analysis of Ensemble Classifiers: Case Studies in Genomics
The combination of multiple classifiers using ensemble methods is
increasingly important for making progress in a variety of difficult prediction
problems. We present a comparative analysis of several ensemble methods through
two case studies in genomics, namely the prediction of genetic interactions and
protein functions, to demonstrate their efficacy on real-world datasets and
draw useful conclusions about their behavior. These methods include simple
aggregation, meta-learning, cluster-based meta-learning, and ensemble selection
using heterogeneous classifiers trained on resampled data to improve the
diversity of their predictions. We present a detailed analysis of these methods
across 4 genomics datasets and find the best of these methods offer
statistically significant improvements over the state of the art in their
respective domains. In addition, we establish a novel connection between
ensemble selection and meta-learning, demonstrating how both of these disparate
methods establish a balance between ensemble diversity and performance.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figures, 8 tables, to appear in Proceedings of the 2013
International Conference on Data Minin
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