biosigner 1.22.0
High-throughput, non-targeted, technologies such as transcriptomics, proteomics and metabolomics, are widely used to discover molecules which allow to efficiently discriminate between biological or clinical conditions of interest (e.g., disease vs control states). Powerful machine learning approaches such as Partial Least Square Discriminant Analysis (PLS-DA), Random Forest (RF) and Support Vector Machines (SVM) have been shown to achieve high levels of prediction accuracy. Feature selection, i.e., the selection of the few features (i.e., the molecular signature) which are of highest discriminating value, is a critical step in building a robust and relevant classifier (Guyon and Elisseeff 2003): First, dimension reduction is usefull to limit the risk of overfitting and increase the prediction stability of the model; second, intrepretation of the molecular signature is facilitated; third, in case of the development of diagnostic product, a restricted list is required for the subsequent validation steps (Rifai, Gillette, and Carr 2006).
Since the comprehensive analysis of all combinations of features is not computationally tractable, several selection techniques have been described, including filter (e.g., p-values thresholding), wrapper (e.g., recursive feature elimination), and embedded (e.g., sparse PLS) approaches (Saeys, Inza, and Larranaga 2007). The major challenge for such methods is to be fast and extract restricted and stable molecular signatures which still provide high performance of the classifier (Gromski et al. 2014; Determan 2015).
The biosigner package implements a new wrapper feature selection algorithm:
the dataset is split into training and testing subsets (by bootstraping, controling class proportion),
model is trained on the training set and balanced accuracy is evaluated on the test set,
the features are ranked according to their importance in the model,
the relevant feature subset at level f is found by a binary search: a feature subset is considered relevant if and only if, when randomly permuting the intensities of other features in the test subsets, the proportion of increased or equal prediction accuracies is lower than a defined threshold f,
the dataset is restricted to the selected features and steps 1 to 4 are repeated until the selected list of features is stable.
Three binary classifiers have been included in biosigner, namely PLS-DA, RF and SVM, as the performances of each machine learning approach may vary depending on the structure of the dataset (Determan 2015). The algorithm returns the tier of each feature for the selected classifer(s): tier S corresponds to the final signature, i.e., features which have been found significant in all the selection steps; features with tier A have been found significant in all but the last selection, and so on for tier B to D. Tier E regroup all previous round of selection.
As for a classical classification algorithm, the biosign
method takes
as input the x
samples times features data frame (or matrix) of
intensities, and the y
factor (or character vector) of class labels
(note that only binary classification is currently available). It returns the
signature (signatureLs
: selected feature names) and the trained model
(modelLs
) for each of the selected classifier. The plot
method
for biosign
objects enable to visualize the individual boxplots of the
selected features. Finally, the predict
method allows to apply the
trained classifier(s) on new datasets.
The algorithm has been successfully applied to transcriptomics and metabolomics data [Rinaudo et al. (2016); see also the Hands-on section below).
We first load the biosigner package:
library(biosigner)
We then use the diaplasma metabolomics dataset (Rinaudo et al. 2016) which results from the analysis of plasma samples from 69 diabetic patients were analyzed by reversed-phase liquid chromatography coupled to high-resolution mass spectrometry (LC-HRMS; Orbitrap Exactive) in the negative ionization mode. The raw data were pre-processed with XCMS and CAMERA (5,501 features), corrected for signal drift, log10 transformed, and annotated with an in-house spectral database. The patient’s age, body mass index, and diabetic type are recorded (Rinaudo et al. 2016).
data(diaplasma)
We attach diaplasma to the search path and display a summary of the content of
the dataMatrix, sampleMetadata and variableMetadata with the view
function from the (imported)
ropls package:
attach(diaplasma)
library(ropls)
ropls::view(dataMatrix)
## dim class mode typeof size NAs min mean median max
## 69 x 5,501 matrix numeric double 3.3 Mb 0 0 4.2 4.4 8.2
## m096.009t01.6 m096.922t00.8 ... m995.603t10.2 m995.613t10.2
## DIA001 2.98126177377087 6.08172882312848 ... 3.93442594703862 3.96424920154706
## DIA002 0 6.13671997362279 ... 3.74201112636229 3.78128422428722
## ... ... ... ... ... ...
## DIA077 0 6.12515971273103 ... 4.55458598372024 4.57310800324247
## DIA078 4.69123816772499 6.134420482337 ... 4.1816445335704 4.20696191303494
ropls::view(sampleMetadata, standardizeL = TRUE)
## type age bmi
## factor numeric numeric
## nRow nCol size NAs
## 69 3 0 Mb 0
## type age bmi
## DIA001 T2 70 31.6
## DIA002 T2 67 28
## ... ... ... ...
## DIA077 T2 50 27
## DIA078 T2 65 29
## 1 data.frame 'factor' column(s) converted to 'numeric' for plotting.
## Standardization of the columns for plotting.
ropls::view(variableMetadata, standardizeL = TRUE)
## mzmed rtmed ... pcgroup spiDb
## numeric numeric ... numeric character
## nRow nCol size NAs
## 5,501 6 0.8 Mb 0
## mzmed rtmed ... pcgroup
## m096.009t01.6 96.00899361 93.92633015 ... 1984
## m096.922t00.8 96.92192011 48.93274877 ... 4
## ... ... ... ... ...
## m995.603t10.2 995.6030195 613.4388762 ... 7160
## m995.613t10.2 995.6134422 613.4446705 ... 7161
## spiDb
## m096.009t01.6 N-Acetyl-L-aspartic acid_HMDB00812
## m096.922t00.8
## ... ...
## m995.603t10.2
## m995.613t10.2
## 3 data.frame 'character' column(s) converted to 'numeric' for plotting.
## Standardization of the columns for plotting.
We see that the diaplasma list contains three objects:
dataMatrix: 69 samples x 5,501 matrix of numeric type containing the intensity profiles (log10 transformed),
sampleMetadata: a 69 x 3 data frame, with the patients’
type: diabetic type, factor
age: numeric
bmi: body mass index, numeric
variableMetadata: a 5,501 x 8 data frame, with the median m/z (‘mzmed’, numeric) and the median retention time in seconds (‘rtmed’, numeric) from XCMS, the ‘isotopes’ (character), ‘adduct’ (character) and ‘pcgroups’ (numeric) annotations from CAMERA, the names of the m/z and RT matching compounds from an in-house spectra of commercial metabolites (‘name_hmdb’, character), and the p-values resulting from the non-parametric hypothesis testing of difference in medians between types (‘type_wilcox_fdr’, numeric), and correlation with age (‘age_spearman_fdr’, numeric) and body mass index (‘bmi_spearman_fdr’, numeric), all corrected for multiple testing (False Discovery Rate).
We can observe that the 3 clinical covariates (diabetic type, age, and bmi) are stronlgy associated:
with(sampleMetadata,
plot(age, bmi, cex = 1.5, col = ifelse(type == "T1", "blue", "red"), pch = 16))
legend("topleft", cex = 1.5, legend = paste0("T", 1:2),
text.col = c("blue", "red"))
Figure 1: age, body mass index (bmi), and diabetic type of the patients from the diaplasma cohort.
Let us look for signatures of type in the diaplasma dataset by using the
biosign
method. To speed up computations in this demo vignette, we restrict
the number of features (from 5,501 to about 500) and the number of bootstraps (5
instead of 50 [default]); the selection on the whole dataset, 50 bootstraps, and
the 3 classifiers, takes around 10 min.
featureSelVl <- variableMetadata[, "mzmed"] >= 450 &
variableMetadata[, "mzmed"] < 500
sum(featureSelVl)
## [1] 533
dataMatrix <- dataMatrix[, featureSelVl]
variableMetadata <- variableMetadata[featureSelVl, ]
diaSign <- biosigner::biosign(dataMatrix, sampleMetadata[, "type"], bootI = 5)
## Significant features from 'S' groups:
## plsda randomforest svm
## m495.261t08.7 "C" "A" "S"
## m497.284t08.1 "S" "S" "E"
## m497.275t08.1 "A" "S" "E"
## m471.241t07.6 "B" "S" "E"
## Accuracy:
## plsda randomforest svm
## Full 0.797 0.835 0.824
## AS 0.823 0.845 0.708
## S 0.825 0.858 0.708
Figure 2: Relevant signatures for the PLS-DA, Random Forest, and SVM classifiers extracted from the diaplasma dataset. The S tier corresponds to the final metabolite signature, i.e., metabolites which passed through all the selection steps.
The arguments are:
x
: the numerical matrix (or data frame) of intensities (samples as rows,
variables as columns),
y
: the factor (or character) specifying the sample labels from the 2
classes,
methodVc
: the classifier(s) to be used; here, the default all value means
that all classifiers available (plsda, randomforest, and svm) are
selected,
bootI
: the number of bootstraps is set to 5 to speed up computations when
generating this vignette; we however recommend to keep the default 50 value
for your analyzes (otherwise signatures may be less stable).
The set.seed
argument ensures that the results from this
vignette can be reproduced exactly; by choosing alternative seeds (and the
default bootI
= 50), similar signatures are obtained, showing the stability
of the selection.
Note:
x
matrix/data frame contain missing values (NA),
these features will be removed prior to modeling with Random Forest and SVM
(in contrast, the NIPALS algorithm from PLS-DA can handle missing values),The resulting signatures for the 3 selected classifiers are both printed and plotted as tiers from S, A, up to E by decreasing relevance. The (S) tier corresponds to the final signature, i.e. features which passed through all the backward selection steps. In contrast, features from the other tiers were discarded during the last (A) or previous (B to E) selection rounds.
Note that tierMaxC = ‘A’ argument in the print and plot methods can be used to view the features from the larger S+A signatures (especially when no S features have been found, or when the performance of the S model is much lower than the S+A model).
The performance of the model built with the input dataset (balanced accuracy: mean of the sensitivity and specificity), or the subset restricted to the S or S+A signatures are shown. We see that with 1 to 5 S feature signatures (i.e., less than 1% of the input), the 3 classifiers achieve good performances (even higher than the full Random Forest and SVM models). Furthermore, reducing the number of features decreases the risk of building non-significant models (i.e., models which do not perform significantly better than those built after randomly permuting the labels). The signatures from the 3 classifiers have some distinct features, which highlights the interest of comparing various machine learning approaches.
The individual boxplots of the features from the complete signature can be visualized with:
biosigner::plot(diaSign, typeC = "boxplot")
Figure 3: Individual boxplots of the features selected for at least one of the classification methods. Features selected for a single classifier are colored (red for PLS-DA, green for Random Forest and blue for SVM).
Let us see the metadata of the complete signature:
variableMetadata[getSignatureLs(diaSign)[["complete"]], ]
## mzmed rtmed isotopes adduct pcgroup
## m495.261t08.7 495.2609 524.1249 1655
## m497.284t08.1 497.2840 486.5338 [M+Cl]- 462.31 [M-H]- 498.287 220
## m497.275t08.1 497.2755 486.5722 [M+Cl]- 462.31 [M-H]- 498.287 220
## m471.241t07.6 471.2408 455.5541 10538
## spiDb
## m495.261t08.7
## m497.284t08.1
## m497.275t08.1 Taurochenodeoxycholic acid_HMDB00951
## m471.241t07.6
Let us split the dataset into a training (the first 4/5th of the 183 samples) and a testing subsets, and extract the relevant features from the training subset:
trainVi <- 1:floor(0.8 * nrow(dataMatrix))
testVi <- setdiff(1:nrow(dataMatrix), trainVi)
diaTrain <- biosigner::biosign(dataMatrix[trainVi, ], sampleMetadata[trainVi, "type"],
bootI = 5)
## Significant features from 'S' groups:
## plsda randomforest svm
## m497.284t08.1 "S" "S" "E"
## m469.215t07.8 "E" "E" "S"
## Accuracy:
## plsda randomforest svm
## Full 0.753 0.797 0.728
## AS 0.823 0.855 0.668
## S 0.814 0.782 0.603
Figure 4: Signatures from the training data set.
We extract the fitted types on the training dataset restricted to the S signatures:
diaFitDF <- biosigner::predict(diaTrain)
We then print the confusion tables for each classifier:
lapply(diaFitDF, function(predFc) table(actual = sampleMetadata[trainVi,
"type"], predicted = predFc))
## $plsda
## predicted
## actual T1 T2
## T1 16 6
## T2 4 29
##
## $randomforest
## predicted
## actual T1 T2
## T1 14 8
## T2 7 26
##
## $svm
## predicted
## actual T1 T2
## T1 7 15
## T2 3 30
and the corresponding balanced accuracies:
sapply(diaFitDF, function(predFc) {
conf <- table(sampleMetadata[trainVi, "type"], predFc)
conf <- sweep(conf, 1, rowSums(conf), "/")
round(mean(diag(conf)), 3)
})
## plsda randomforest svm
## 0.803 0.712 0.614
Note that these values are slightly different from the accuracies returned by biosign because the latter are computed by using the resampling scheme selected by the bootI (or crossvalI) arguments:
round(biosigner::getAccuracyMN(diaTrain)["S", ], 3)
## plsda randomforest svm
## 0.814 0.782 0.603
Finally, we can compute the performances on the test subset:
diaTestDF <- biosigner::predict(diaTrain, newdata = dataMatrix[testVi, ])
sapply(diaTestDF, function(predFc) {
conf <- table(sampleMetadata[testVi, "type"], predFc)
conf <- sweep(conf, 1, rowSums(conf), "/")
round(mean(diag(conf)), 3)
})
## plsda randomforest svm
## 0.750 0.667 0.500
The ExpressionSet class from the
Biobase
bioconductor package has been developed to conveniently handle preprocessed
omics objects, including the variables x samples matrix of intensities, and data
frames containing the sample and variable metadata (Huber et al. 2015). The matrix and
the two data frames can be accessed by the exprs
, pData
and fData
respectively (note that the data matrix is stored in the object with samples in
columns).
The biosign
method can be applied to an ExpressionSet object, by using the object as the x
argument, and by indicating as the y
argument the name of the phenoData column to be used as the response.
In the example below, we will first build an ExpressionSet object from the diaplasma data set, we display its content with the view
method from the ropls
package, and we then perform the signature discovery:
library(Biobase)
diaSet <- Biobase::ExpressionSet(assayData = t(dataMatrix),
phenoData = new("AnnotatedDataFrame",
data = sampleMetadata),
featureData = new("AnnotatedDataFrame",
data = variableMetadata))
ropls::view(diaSet)
## dim class mode typeof size NAs min mean median max
## 533 x 69 matrix numeric double 0.3 Mb 0 0 4.1 4.3 6.8
## DIA001 DIA002 ... DIA077
## m450.250t10.1 5.12863292908825 4.69775314718501 ... 4.55436022183607
## m450.259t10.1 5.50709346956476 4.92161863228109 ... 5.0640624913219
## ... ... ... ... ...
## m499.927t10.6 3.57764855856904 3.98354162896053 ... 4.09122249726806
## m499.934t10.6 4.13090241048648 4.63626155578966 ... 4.61932358034107
## DIA078
## m450.250t10.1 4.82547078556465
## m450.259t10.1 5.03442202562934
## ... ...
## m499.927t10.6 3.64651351437041
## m499.934t10.6 4.27749085279123
## type age bmi
## factor numeric numeric
## nRow nCol size NAs
## 69 3 0 Mb 0
## type age bmi
## DIA001 T2 70 31.6
## DIA002 T2 67 28
## ... ... ... ...
## DIA077 T2 50 27
## DIA078 T2 65 29
## mzmed rtmed ... pcgroup spiDb
## numeric numeric ... numeric character
## nRow nCol size NAs
## 533 6 0.1 Mb 0
## mzmed rtmed ... pcgroup spiDb
## m450.250t10.1 450.2500748 604.3564473 ... 4070
## m450.259t10.1 450.2591797 604.1391833 ... 4026
## ... ... ... ... ... ...
## m499.927t10.6 499.9270766 634.573285 ... 8954
## m499.934t10.6 499.9344601 634.2525355 ... 8761
biosigner::biosign(diaSet, "type", bootI = 5)
## Significant features from 'S' groups:
## plsda randomforest svm
## m495.261t08.7 "C" "A" "S"
## m497.284t08.1 "S" "S" "E"
## m497.275t08.1 "A" "S" "E"
## m471.241t07.6 "B" "S" "E"
## Accuracy:
## plsda randomforest svm
## Full 0.797 0.835 0.824
## AS 0.823 0.845 0.708
## S 0.825 0.858 0.708
Note: Because of identical names in the two packages, the combine
method from
package
Biobase is
replaced by the combine
method from package
randomForest.
The ExpressionSet can be displayed
ropls::view(diaSet)
## 'exprs(x)':
## dim class mode typeof size NAs min mean median max
## 533 x 69 matrix numeric double 0.3 Mb 0 0 4.1 4.3 6.8
## DIA001 DIA002 ... DIA077
## m450.250t10.1 5.12863292908825 4.69775314718501 ... 4.55436022183607
## m450.259t10.1 5.50709346956476 4.92161863228109 ... 5.0640624913219
## ... ... ... ... ...
## m499.927t10.6 3.57764855856904 3.98354162896053 ... 4.09122249726806
## m499.934t10.6 4.13090241048648 4.63626155578966 ... 4.61932358034107
## DIA078
## m450.250t10.1 4.82547078556465
## m450.259t10.1 5.03442202562934
## ... ...
## m499.927t10.6 3.64651351437041
## m499.934t10.6 4.27749085279123
## 'pData(x)':
## type age bmi
## factor numeric numeric
## nRow nCol size NAs
## 69 3 0 Mb 0
## type age bmi
## DIA001 T2 70 31.6
## DIA002 T2 67 28
## ... ... ... ...
## DIA077 T2 50 27
## DIA078 T2 65 29
## 1 data.frame 'factor' column(s) converted to 'numeric' for plotting.
## 'fData(x)':
## mzmed rtmed ... pcgroup spiDb
## numeric numeric ... numeric character
## nRow nCol size NAs
## 533 6 0.1 Mb 0
## mzmed rtmed ... pcgroup spiDb
## m450.250t10.1 450.2500748 604.3564473 ... 4070
## m450.259t10.1 450.2591797 604.1391833 ... 4026
## ... ... ... ... ... ...
## m499.927t10.6 499.9270766 634.573285 ... 8954
## m499.934t10.6 499.9344601 634.2525355 ... 8761
## 3 data.frame 'character' column(s) converted to 'numeric' for plotting.
Before moving to new data sets, we detach diaplasma from the search path:
detach(diaplasma)
In this section, biosign
is applied to two metabolomics and one
transcriptomics data sets. Please refer to Rinaudo et al. (2016) for a full discussion of
the methods and results.
The sacurine LC-HRMS dataset from the dependent ropls package can also be used (Thevenot et al. 2015): Urine samples from a cohort of 183 adults were analyzed by using an LTQ Orbitrap in the negative ionization mode. A total of 109 metabolites were identified or annotated at the MSI level 1 or 2. Signal drift and batch effect were corrected, and each urine profile was normalized to the osmolality of the sample. Finally, the data were log10 transformed (see the ropls vignette for further details and examples).
We can for instance look for signatures of the gender:
data(sacurine)
sacSign <- biosigner::biosign(sacurine[["dataMatrix"]],
sacurine[["sampleMetadata"]][, "gender"],
methodVc = "plsda")
## Significant features from 'S' groups:
## plsda
## Malic acid "S"
## p-Anisic acid "S"
## Testosterone glucuronide "S"
## Accuracy:
## plsda
## Full 0.876
## AS 0.882
## S 0.889
Figure 5: PLS-DA signature from the ‘sacurine’ data set.
The spikedApples dataset was obtained by LC-HRMS analysis (SYNAPT Q-TOF, Waters) of one control and three spiked groups of 10 apples each. The spiked mixtures consists in 2 compounds which were not naturally present in the matrix and 7 compounds aimed at achieving a final increase of 20%, 40% or 100% of the endogeneous concentrations. The authors identified 22 features (out of the 1,632 detected in the positive ionization mode; i.e. 1.3%) which came from the spiked compounds. The dataset is included in the BioMark R package (Franceschi et al. 2012). Let us use the control and group1 samples (20 in total) in this study.
library(BioMark)
data(SpikePos)
group1Vi <- which(SpikePos[["classes"]] %in% c("control", "group1"))
appleMN <- SpikePos[["data"]][group1Vi, ]
spikeFc <- factor(SpikePos[["classes"]][group1Vi])
annotDF <- SpikePos[["annotation"]]
rownames(annotDF) <- colnames(appleMN)
We can check, by using the opls
method from the
ropls package
for multivariate analysis, that:
biomark.pca <- ropls::opls(appleMN, fig.pdfC = "none")
## PCA
## 20 samples x 1632 variables
## standard scaling of predictors
## R2X(cum) pre ort
## Total 0.523 7 0
ropls::plot(biomark.pca, parAsColFcVn = spikeFc)
biomark.pls <- ropls::opls(appleMN, spikeFc)
## PLS-DA
## 20 samples x 1632 variables and 1 response
## standard scaling of predictors and response(s)
## R2X(cum) R2Y(cum) Q2(cum) RMSEE pre ort pR2Y pQ2
## Total 0.145 0.995 0.4 0.0396 2 0 0.1 0.4
Let us now extract the molecular signatures:
appleSign <- biosigner::biosign(appleMN, spikeFc)
## Significant features from 'S' groups:
## plsda randomforest svm
## 449.1/327 "S" "S" "C"
## Accuracy:
## plsda randomforest svm
## Full 0.79 0.921 0.793
## AS 1.00 1.000 0.853
## S 1.00 1.000 NA
The 449.1/327 corresponds to the Cyanidin-3-galactoside (absent in the control; Franceschi et al. (2012)).
annotDF <- SpikePos[["annotation"]]
rownames(annotDF) <- colnames(appleMN)
annotDF[getSignatureLs(appleSign)[["complete"]], c("adduct", "found.in.standards")]
## adduct found.in.standards
## 449.1/327 1
Samples from 47 patients with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) and 25 patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) have been analyzed using Affymetrix Hgu6800 chips resulting in expression data of 7,129 gene probes (Golub et al. 1999). The golub dataset is available in the golubEsets package from Bioconductor. Let us compute for example the SVM signature (to speed up this demo example, the number of features is restricted to 500):
library(golubEsets)
data(Golub_Merge)
golubMN <- t(exprs(Golub_Merge))
leukemiaFc <- pData(Golub_Merge)[["ALL.AML"]]
table(leukemiaFc)
## leukemiaFc
## ALL AML
## 47 25
varSubVi <- 1501:2000
golubSign <- biosigner::biosign(golubMN[, varSubVi], leukemiaFc, methodVc = "svm")
## Significant features from 'S' groups:
## svm
## M11147_at "S"
## M17733_at "S"
## M19507_at "S"
## M27891_at "S"
## Accuracy:
## svm
## Full 0.955
## AS 0.967
## S 0.959
Figure 6: SVM signature from the golub data set.
The computation results in a signature of 4 features only and a sparse SVM model performing even better (95.9% accuracy) than the model trained on the dataset of 500 variables (95.5% accuracy).
The hu6800.db bioconductor package can be used to get the annotation of the selected probes (Carlson 2016):
library(hu6800.db)
sapply(biosigner::getSignatureLs(golubSign)[["complete"]],
function(probeC)
get(probeC, env = hu6800GENENAME))
## M11147_at M17733_at
## "ferritin light chain" "thymosin beta 4 X-linked"
## M19507_at M27891_at
## "myeloperoxidase" "cystatin C"
Cystatin C is part of the 50 gene signature selected by Golub and colleagues on the basis of a metric derived from the Student’s statistic of mean differences between the AML and ALL groups (Golub et al. 1999). Interestingly, the third probe, myeloperoxidase, is a cytochemical marker for the diagnosis (and also potentially the prognosis) of acute myeloid leukemia (AML).
Here is the output of sessionInfo()
on the system on which this document was
compiled:
## R version 4.1.1 (2021-08-10)
## Platform: x86_64-pc-linux-gnu (64-bit)
## Running under: Ubuntu 20.04.3 LTS
##
## Matrix products: default
## BLAS: /home/biocbuild/bbs-3.14-bioc/R/lib/libRblas.so
## LAPACK: /home/biocbuild/bbs-3.14-bioc/R/lib/libRlapack.so
##
## locale:
## [1] LC_CTYPE=en_US.UTF-8 LC_NUMERIC=C
## [3] LC_TIME=en_GB LC_COLLATE=C
## [5] LC_MONETARY=en_US.UTF-8 LC_MESSAGES=en_US.UTF-8
## [7] LC_PAPER=en_US.UTF-8 LC_NAME=C
## [9] LC_ADDRESS=C LC_TELEPHONE=C
## [11] LC_MEASUREMENT=en_US.UTF-8 LC_IDENTIFICATION=C
##
## attached base packages:
## [1] stats4 stats graphics grDevices utils datasets methods
## [8] base
##
## other attached packages:
## [1] hu6800.db_3.13.0 org.Hs.eg.db_3.14.0 AnnotationDbi_1.56.0
## [4] IRanges_2.28.0 S4Vectors_0.32.0 golubEsets_1.35.0
## [7] BioMark_0.4.5 st_1.2.6 sda_1.3.7
## [10] fdrtool_1.2.16 corpcor_1.6.10 entropy_1.3.1
## [13] MASS_7.3-54 glmnet_4.1-2 Matrix_1.3-4
## [16] pls_2.8-0 biosigner_1.22.0 ropls_1.26.0
## [19] Biobase_2.54.0 BiocGenerics_0.40.0 BiocStyle_2.22.0
##
## loaded via a namespace (and not attached):
## [1] Rcpp_1.0.7 lattice_0.20-45 png_0.1-7
## [4] class_7.3-19 Biostrings_2.62.0 digest_0.6.28
## [7] foreach_1.5.1 R6_2.5.1 GenomeInfoDb_1.30.0
## [10] RSQLite_2.2.8 evaluate_0.14 e1071_1.7-9
## [13] httr_1.4.2 highr_0.9 zlibbioc_1.40.0
## [16] rlang_0.4.12 jquerylib_0.1.4 blob_1.2.2
## [19] magick_2.7.3 rmarkdown_2.11 splines_4.1.1
## [22] stringr_1.4.0 RCurl_1.98-1.5 bit_4.0.4
## [25] proxy_0.4-26 compiler_4.1.1 xfun_0.27
## [28] pkgconfig_2.0.3 shape_1.4.6 htmltools_0.5.2
## [31] KEGGREST_1.34.0 GenomeInfoDbData_1.2.7 bookdown_0.24
## [34] codetools_0.2-18 randomForest_4.6-14 crayon_1.4.1
## [37] bitops_1.0-7 grid_4.1.1 jsonlite_1.7.2
## [40] DBI_1.1.1 magrittr_2.0.1 stringi_1.7.5
## [43] cachem_1.0.6 XVector_0.34.0 bslib_0.3.1
## [46] vctrs_0.3.8 iterators_1.0.13 tools_4.1.1
## [49] bit64_4.0.5 fastmap_1.1.0 survival_3.2-13
## [52] yaml_2.2.1 BiocManager_1.30.16 memoise_2.0.0
## [55] knitr_1.36 sass_0.4.0
Carlson, M. 2016. Hu6800.db: Affymetrix Hugenefl Genome Array Annotation Data (Chip Hu6800).
Determan, CE. 2015. “Optimal Algorithm for Metabolomics Classification and Feature Selection Varies by Dataset.” International Journal of Biology 7 (1): 100–115. https://doi.org/10.5539/ijb.v7n1p100.
Franceschi, P., D. Masuero, U. Vrhovsek, F. Mattivi, and R. Wehrens. 2012. “A Benchmark Spike-in Data Set for Biomarker Identification in Metabolomics.” Journal of Chemometrics 26 (1-2): 16–24. https://doi.org/10.1002/cem.1420.
Golub, TR., DK. Slonim, P. Tamayo, C. Huard, M. Gaasenbeek, JP. Mesirov, H. Coller, et al. 1999. “Molecular Classification of Cancer: Class Discovery and Class Prediction by Gene Expression Monitoring.” Science 286 (5439): 531. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.286.5439.531.
Gromski, PS., Y. Xu, E. Correa, DI. Ellis, ML. Turner, and R. Goodacre. 2014. “A Comparative Investigation of Modern Feature Selection and Classification Approaches for the Analysis of Mass Spectrometry Data.” Analytica Chimica Acta 829 (0): 1–8. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.aca.2014.03.039.
Guyon, I., and A. Elisseeff. 2003. “An Introduction to Variable and Feature Selection.” Journal of Machine Learning Research 3: 1157–82.
Huber, W., VJ. Carey, R. Gentleman, S. Anders, M. Carlson, BS. Carvalho, HC. Bravo, et al. 2015. “Orchestrating High-Throughput Genomic Analysis with Bioconductor.” Nature Methods 12 (2): 115–21. https://doi.org/10.1038/nmeth.3252.
Rifai, N., MA. Gillette, and SA. Carr. 2006. “Protein Biomarker Discovery and Validation: The Long and Uncertain Path to Clinical Utility.” Nature Biotechnology. https://doi.org/10.1038/nbt1235.
Rinaudo, P., S. Boudah, C. Junot, and EA. Thevenot. 2016. “Biosigner: A New Method for the Discovery of Significant Molecular Signatures from Omics Data.” Frontiers in Molecular Biosciences 3. https://doi.org/10.3389/fmolb.2016.00026.
Saeys, Y., I. Inza, and P. Larranaga. 2007. “A Review of Feature Selection Techniques in Bioinformatics.” Bioinformatics 23 (19): 2507–17. https://doi.org/10.1093/bioinformatics/btm344.
Thevenot, EA., A. Roux, Y. Xu, E. Ezan, and C. Junot. 2015. “Analysis of the Human Adult Urinary Metabolome Variations with Age, Body Mass Index, and Gender by Implementing a Comprehensive Workflow for Univariate and OPLS Statistical Analyses.” Journal of Proteome Research 14 (8): 3322–35. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jproteome.5b00354.