Paper List
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STAR-GO: Improving Protein Function Prediction by Learning to Hierarchically Integrate Ontology-Informed Semantic Embeddings
This paper addresses the core challenge of generalizing protein function prediction to unseen or newly introduced Gene Ontology (GO) terms by overcomi...
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Incorporating indel channels into average-case analysis of seed-chain-extend
This paper addresses the core pain point of bridging the theoretical gap for the widely used seed-chain-extend heuristic by providing the first rigoro...
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Competition, stability, and functionality in excitatory-inhibitory neural circuits
This paper addresses the core challenge of extending interpretable energy-based frameworks to biologically realistic asymmetric neural networks, where...
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Enhancing Clinical Note Generation with ICD-10, Clinical Ontology Knowledge Graphs, and Chain-of-Thought Prompting Using GPT-4
This paper addresses the core challenge of generating accurate and clinically relevant patient notes from sparse inputs (ICD codes and basic demograph...
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Hypothesis-Based Particle Detection for Accurate Nanoparticle Counting and Digital Diagnostics
This paper addresses the core challenge of achieving accurate, interpretable, and training-free nanoparticle counting in digital diagnostic assays, wh...
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MCP-AI: Protocol-Driven Intelligence Framework for Autonomous Reasoning in Healthcare
This paper addresses the critical gap in healthcare AI systems that lack contextual reasoning, long-term state management, and verifiable workflows by...
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Model Gateway: Model Management Platform for Model-Driven Drug Discovery
This paper addresses the critical bottleneck of fragmented, ad-hoc model management in pharmaceutical research by providing a centralized, scalable ML...
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Tree Thinking in the Genomic Era: Unifying Models Across Cells, Populations, and Species
This paper addresses the fragmentation of tree-based inference methods across biological scales by identifying shared algorithmic principles and stati...
scCluBench: Comprehensive Benchmarking of Clustering Algorithms for Single-Cell RNA Sequencing
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The 30-Second View
IN SHORT: This paper addresses the critical gap of fragmented and non-standardized benchmarking in single-cell RNA-seq clustering, which hinders objective comparison and selection of appropriate methods for specific biological contexts.
Innovation (TL;DR)
- Methodology Introduces scCluBench, the first comprehensive benchmarking framework that systematically evaluates 16 clustering methods across four categories (traditional, deep learning-based, graph-based, and foundation models) on 36 standardized datasets.
- Methodology Establishes standardized protocols for biological interpretation, including reproducible pipelines for marker gene identification and two distinct cell type annotation approaches (best-mapping and marker-overlap), validated with gold-standard references.
- Methodology Provides a unified and modular benchmarking workflow covering data preprocessing, clustering, and annotation with standardized input-output formats, ensuring reproducibility and fair comparison.
Key conclusions
- scCDCG (a cut-informed graph embedding model) achieved the highest average clustering accuracy (81.29 ± 1.45) across 36 datasets, outperforming other graph-based, deep learning, and traditional methods.
- Biological foundation models (scGPT, GeneFormer, GeneCompass) showed strong performance in classification tasks (e.g., scGPT achieved 98.14% ACC on Sapiens Ear Crista Ampullaris) but underperformed in direct clustering, highlighting a trade-off between general representation and task-specific optimization.
- The benchmark reveals method-specific limitations: traditional methods struggle with sparse data, deep learning models may fail to capture cell relationships, and graph-based models can suffer from over-smoothing, while most methods decouple embedding learning from clustering optimization.
Abstract: Cell clustering is crucial for uncovering cellular heterogeneity in single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq) data by identifying cell types and marker genes. Despite its importance, benchmarks for scRNA-seq clustering methods remain fragmented, often lacking standardized protocols and failing to incorporate recent advances in artificial intelligence. To fill these gaps, we present scCluBench, a comprehensive benchmark of clustering algorithms for scRNA-seq data. First, scCluBench provides 36 scRNA-seq datasets collected from diverse public sources, covering multiple tissues, which are uniformly processed and standardized to ensure consistency for systematic evaluation and downstream analyses. To evaluate performance, we collect and reproduce a range of scRNA-seq clustering methods, including traditional, deep learning-based, graph-based, and biological foundation models. We comprehensively evaluate each method both quantitatively and qualitatively, using core performance metrics as well as visualization analyses. Furthermore, we construct representative downstream biological tasks, such as marker gene identification and cell type annotation, to further assess the practical utility. scCluBench then investigates the performance differences and applicability boundaries of various clustering models across diverse analytical tasks, systematically assessing their robustness and scalability in real-world scenarios. Overall, scCluBench offers a standardized and user-friendly benchmark for scRNA-seq clustering, with curated datasets, unified evaluation protocols, and transparent analyses, facilitating informed method selection and providing valuable insights into model generalizability and application scope.222All datasets, code, and the Extended version for scCluBench are available at the link: https://github.com/XPgogogo/scCluBench. More details for each stage are provided in the extended version.