Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Systematic comparison of ranking aggregation methods for gene lists in experimental results

View through CrossRef
AbstractA common experimental output in biomedical science is a list of genes implicated in a given biological process or disease. The results of a group of studies answering the same, or similar, questions can be combined by meta-analysis to find a consensus or a more reliable answer. Ranking aggregation methods can be used to combine gene lists from various sources in meta-analyses. Evaluating a ranking aggregation method on a specific type of dataset before using it is required to support the reliability of the result since the property of a dataset can influence the performance of an algorithm. Evaluation of aggregation methods is usually based on a simulated database especially for the algorithms designed for gene lists because of the lack of a known truth for real data. However, simulated datasets tend to be too small compared to experimental data and neglect key features, including heterogeneity of quality, relevance and the inclusion of unranked lists. In this study, a group of existing methods and their variations which are suitable for meta-analysis of gene lists are compared using simulated and real data. Simulated data was used to explore the performance of the aggregation methods as a function of emulating the common scenarios of real genomics data, with various heterogeneity of quality, noise level, and a mix of unranked and ranked data using 20000 possible entities. In addition to the evaluation with simulated data, a comparison using real genomic data on the SARS-CoV-2 virus, cancer (NSCLC), and bacteria (macrophage apoptosis) was performed. We summarise our evaluation results in terms of a simple flowchart to select a ranking aggregation method for genomics data.
Title: Systematic comparison of ranking aggregation methods for gene lists in experimental results
Description:
AbstractA common experimental output in biomedical science is a list of genes implicated in a given biological process or disease.
The results of a group of studies answering the same, or similar, questions can be combined by meta-analysis to find a consensus or a more reliable answer.
Ranking aggregation methods can be used to combine gene lists from various sources in meta-analyses.
Evaluating a ranking aggregation method on a specific type of dataset before using it is required to support the reliability of the result since the property of a dataset can influence the performance of an algorithm.
Evaluation of aggregation methods is usually based on a simulated database especially for the algorithms designed for gene lists because of the lack of a known truth for real data.
However, simulated datasets tend to be too small compared to experimental data and neglect key features, including heterogeneity of quality, relevance and the inclusion of unranked lists.
In this study, a group of existing methods and their variations which are suitable for meta-analysis of gene lists are compared using simulated and real data.
Simulated data was used to explore the performance of the aggregation methods as a function of emulating the common scenarios of real genomics data, with various heterogeneity of quality, noise level, and a mix of unranked and ranked data using 20000 possible entities.
In addition to the evaluation with simulated data, a comparison using real genomic data on the SARS-CoV-2 virus, cancer (NSCLC), and bacteria (macrophage apoptosis) was performed.
We summarise our evaluation results in terms of a simple flowchart to select a ranking aggregation method for genomics data.

Related Results

Listlessness in the Archive
Listlessness in the Archive
1. Make a list of things to do2. Copy list of things left undone from previous list3. Add items to list of new things needing to be done4. Add some of the things already done from ...
Evaluating the Science to Inform the Physical Activity Guidelines for Americans Midcourse Report
Evaluating the Science to Inform the Physical Activity Guidelines for Americans Midcourse Report
Abstract The Physical Activity Guidelines for Americans (Guidelines) advises older adults to be as active as possible. Yet, despite the well documented benefits of physical a...
Expression and polymorphism of genes in gallstones
Expression and polymorphism of genes in gallstones
ABSTRACT Through the method of clinical case control study, to explore the expression and genetic polymorphism of KLF14 gene (rs4731702 and rs972283) and SR-B1 gene (rs...
Do evidence summaries increase health policy‐makers' use of evidence from systematic reviews? A systematic review
Do evidence summaries increase health policy‐makers' use of evidence from systematic reviews? A systematic review
This review summarizes the evidence from six randomized controlled trials that judged the effectiveness of systematic review summaries on policymakers' decision making, or the most...
Approaches: Computational Cladistics
Approaches: Computational Cladistics
Abstract Before turning to attempts to construct and evaluate linguistic family trees, which will be the main topic of this chapter and the next, we return briefiy t...
The effect of Angelica Dahurica extracts on platelet aggregation
The effect of Angelica Dahurica extracts on platelet aggregation
Platelet aggregation is one of the important mechanisms in hemostasis. Improper platelet function may lead to bleeding or atherothrombosis. Angelica dahurica (AD) has been used in ...
Prioritizing Complex Disease Genes from Heterogeneous Public Databases
Prioritizing Complex Disease Genes from Heterogeneous Public Databases
AbstractBackgroundComplex human diseases are defined not only by sophisticated patterns of genetic variants/mutations upstream but also by many interplaying genes, RNAs, and protei...
Ranking of institutions and academic journals
Ranking of institutions and academic journals
Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to provide a selective review of literature and presents a conceptual framework in journal and institution rankings. Several ...

Back to Top