Paper List
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Macroscopic Dominance from Microscopic Extremes: Symmetry Breaking in Spatial Competition
This paper addresses the fundamental question of how microscopic stochastic advantages in spatial exploration translate into macroscopic resource domi...
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Linear Readout of Neural Manifolds with Continuous Variables
This paper addresses the core challenge of quantifying how the geometric structure of high-dimensional neural population activity (neural manifolds) d...
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Theory of Cell Body Lensing and Phototaxis Sign Reversal in “Eyeless” Mutants of Chlamydomonas
This paper solves the core puzzle of how eyeless mutants of Chlamydomonas exhibit reversed phototaxis by quantitatively modeling the competition betwe...
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Cross-Species Transfer Learning for Electrophysiology-to-Transcriptomics Mapping in Cortical GABAergic Interneurons
This paper addresses the challenge of predicting transcriptomic identity from electrophysiological recordings in human cortical interneurons, where li...
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Uncovering statistical structure in large-scale neural activity with Restricted Boltzmann Machines
This paper addresses the core challenge of modeling large-scale neural population activity (1500-2000 neurons) with interpretable higher-order interac...
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Realizing Common Random Numbers: Event-Keyed Hashing for Causally Valid Stochastic Models
This paper addresses the critical problem that standard stateful PRNG implementations in agent-based models violate causal validity by making random d...
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A Standardized Framework for Evaluating Gene Expression Generative Models
This paper addresses the critical lack of standardized evaluation protocols for single-cell gene expression generative models, where inconsistent metr...
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Single Molecule Localization Microscopy Challenge: A Biologically Inspired Benchmark for Long-Sequence Modeling
This paper addresses the core challenge of evaluating state-space models on biologically realistic, sparse, and stochastic temporal processes, which a...
Omics Data Discovery Agents
Department of Computational Biomedicine, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles, CA, USA
30秒速读
IN SHORT: This paper addresses the core challenge of making published omics data computationally reusable by automating the extraction, quantification, and integration of datasets scattered across unstructured literature and supplementary materials.
核心创新
- Methodology Introduces an LLM-agent framework with MCP servers that automates the entire pipeline from literature mining to data quantification and cross-study analysis.
- Methodology Demonstrates automated parameter extraction from article text for containerized quantification pipelines (MaxQuant/DIA-NN), achieving 63% overlap in differentially expressed proteins when matching preprocessing methods.
- Biology Identifies consistent protein regulation patterns (CLU, TGFBI, AMBP, MYH10, PRELP, Col14A1) across multiple liver fibrosis studies through automated cross-study comparison.
主要结论
- Achieved 80% precision for automated identification of datasets from standard repositories (PRIDE, MassIVE, GEO) across 39 proteomics articles.
- Demonstrated 63% overlap in differentially expressed proteins when agents matched article preprocessing methods, compared to 37% overlap without explicit instruction.
- Identified 6 consistently upregulated proteins (CLU, TGFBI, AMBP, MYH10, PRELP, Col14A1) across three independent liver fibrosis studies through automated cross-study analysis.
摘要: The biomedical literature contains a vast collection of omics studies, yet most published data remain functionally inaccessible for computational reuse. When raw data are deposited in public repositories, essential information for reproducing reported results is dispersed across main text, supplementary files, and code repositories. In rarer instances where intermediate data is made available (e.g. protein abundance files), its location is irregular. In this article, we present an agentic framework that fetches omics-related articles and transforms the unstructured information into searchable research objects. Our system employs large language model (LLM) agents with access to tools for fetching omics studies, extracting article metadata, identifying and downloading published data, executing containerized quantification pipelines, and running analyses to address novel question. We demonstrate automated metadata extraction from PubMed Central articles, achieving 80% precision for dataset identification from standard data repositories. Using model context protocol (MCP) servers to expose containerized analysis tools, our set of agents were able to identify a set of relevant articles, download the associated datasets, and re-quantify the proteomics data. The results had a 63% overlap in differentially expressed proteins when matching reported preprocessing methods. Furthermore, we show that agents can identify semantically similar studies, determine data compatibility, and perform cross-study comparisons, revealing consistent protein regulation patterns in liver fibrosis. This work establishes a foundation for converting the static biomedical literature into an executable, queryable resource that enables automated data reuse at scale.