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Genetic programming‐based approach to elucidate biochemical interaction networks from data
Author(s) -
Kandpal Manoj,
Kalyan Chakravarthy Mynampati,
Samavedham Lakshminarayanan
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
iet systems biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.367
H-Index - 50
eISSN - 1751-8857
pISSN - 1751-8849
DOI - 10.1049/iet-syb.2012.0011
Subject(s) - computer science , genetic programming , causality (physics) , false positive paradox , artificial intelligence , machine learning , data mining , quantum mechanics , physics
Biochemical systems are characterised by cyclic/reversible reciprocal actions, non‐linear interactions and a mixed relationship structures (linear and non‐linear; static and dynamic). Deciphering the architecture of such systems using measured data to provide quantitative information regarding the nature of relationships that exist between the measured variables is a challenging proposition. Causality detection is one of the methodologies that are applied to elucidate biochemical networks from such data. Autoregressive‐based modelling approach such as granger causality, partial directed coherence, directed transfer function and canonical variate analysis have been applied on different systems for deciphering such interactions, but with limited success. In this study, the authors propose a genetic programming‐based causality detection (GPCD) methodology which blends evolutionary computation‐based procedures along with parameter estimation methods to derive a mathematical model of the system. Application of the GPCD methodology on five data sets that contained the different challenges mentioned above indicated that GPCD performs better than the other methods in uncovering the exact structure with less false positives. On a glycolysis data set, GPCD was able to fill the ‘interaction gaps’ which were missed by other methods.

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