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Disentangling Multidimensional Spatio-Temporal Data into Their Common and Aberrant Responses
Author(s) -
Young Hwan Chang,
James E. Korkola,
Dhara N. Amin,
Mark M. Moasser,
Jose M. Carmena,
Joe W. Gray,
Claire J. Tomlin
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
plos one
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.99
H-Index - 332
ISSN - 1932-6203
DOI - 10.1371/journal.pone.0121607
Subject(s) - computer science , data mining , robust principal component analysis , component (thermodynamics) , representation (politics) , focus (optics) , principal component analysis , biological data , process (computing) , data type , range (aeronautics) , artificial intelligence , machine learning , bioinformatics , biology , physics , optics , politics , political science , law , thermodynamics , programming language , operating system , materials science , composite material
With the advent of high-throughput measurement techniques, scientists and engineers are starting to grapple with massive data sets and encountering challenges with how to organize, process and extract information into meaningful structures. Multidimensional spatio-temporal biological data sets such as time series gene expression with various perturbations over different cell lines, or neural spike trains across many experimental trials, have the potential to acquire insight about the dynamic behavior of the system. For this potential to be realized, we need a suitable representation to understand the data. A general question is how to organize the observed data into meaningful structures and how to find an appropriate similarity measure. A natural way of viewing these complex high dimensional data sets is to examine and analyze the large-scale features and then to focus on the interesting details. Since the wide range of experiments and unknown complexity of the underlying system contribute to the heterogeneity of biological data, we develop a new method by proposing an extension of Robust Principal Component Analysis (RPCA), which models common variations across multiple experiments as the lowrank component and anomalies across these experiments as the sparse component. We show that the proposed method is able to find distinct subtypes and classify data sets in a robust way without any prior knowledge by separating these common responses and abnormal responses. Thus, the proposed method provides us a new representation of these data sets which has the potential to help users acquire new insight from data.

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