Paper List
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GOPHER: Optimization-based Phenotype Randomization for Genome-Wide Association Studies with Differential Privacy
This paper addresses the core challenge of balancing rigorous privacy protection with data utility when releasing full GWAS summary statistics, overco...
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Real-time Cricket Sorting By Sex A low-cost embedded solution using YOLOv8 and Raspberry Pi
This paper addresses the critical bottleneck in industrial insect farming: the lack of automated, real-time sex sorting systems for Acheta domesticus ...
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Training Dynamics of Learning 3D-Rotational Equivariance
This work addresses the core dilemma of whether to use computationally expensive equivariant architectures or faster symmetry-agnostic models with dat...
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Fast and Accurate Node-Age Estimation Under Fossil Calibration Uncertainty Using the Adjusted Pairwise Likelihood
This paper addresses the dual challenge of computational inefficiency and sensitivity to fossil calibration errors in Bayesian divergence time estimat...
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Few-shot Protein Fitness Prediction via In-context Learning and Test-time Training
This paper addresses the core challenge of accurately predicting protein fitness with only a handful of experimental observations, where data collecti...
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scCluBench: Comprehensive Benchmarking of Clustering Algorithms for Single-Cell RNA Sequencing
This paper addresses the critical gap of fragmented and non-standardized benchmarking in single-cell RNA-seq clustering, which hinders objective compa...
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Simulation and inference methods for non-Markovian stochastic biochemical reaction networks
This paper addresses the computational bottleneck of simulating and performing Bayesian inference for non-Markovian biochemical systems with history-d...
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Assessment of Simulation-based Inference Methods for Stochastic Compartmental Models
This paper addresses the core challenge of performing accurate Bayesian parameter inference for stochastic epidemic models when the likelihood functio...
SNPgen: Phenotype-Supervised Genotype Representation and Synthetic Data Generation via Latent Diffusion
DEIB, Politecnico di Milano | Health Data Science Centre, Human Technopole | Genomics Research Centre, Human Technopole | MOX - Department of Mathematics, Politecnico di Milano | Department of Public Health and Primary Care, University of Cambridge
30秒速读
IN SHORT: This paper addresses the core challenge of generating privacy-preserving synthetic genotype data that maintains both statistical fidelity and downstream predictive utility for supervised tasks like polygenic risk scoring.
核心创新
- Methodology Introduces a two-stage conditional latent diffusion framework combining GWAS-guided variant selection (1,024–2,048 SNPs) with VAE compression and phenotype-conditioned generation via classifier-free guidance.
- Methodology Implements phenotype-supervised generation rather than unconditional sampling, producing synthetic genotypes directly usable for downstream disease prediction tasks without additional phenotype mechanisms.
- Biology Demonstrates that GWAS-guided selection of trait-associated SNPs preserves predictive performance comparable to genome-wide methods while using 2–6× fewer variants, offering a favorable computational trade-off.
主要结论
- Models trained on synthetic data matched real-data predictive performance across four complex diseases (CAD, BC, T1D, T2D) in TSTR protocols, with synthetic XGBoost achieving AUCs of 0.587±0.019 for T2D and 0.594±0.011 for CAD, closely matching real-data performance.
- Privacy analysis showed zero identical matches, near-random membership inference (AUC ≈ 0.50), preserved LD structure, and high allele frequency correlation (r≥0.95) with source data, confirming strong privacy guarantees.
- In controlled simulations with known causal effects, synthetic data showed strong agreement with real-data effect estimates (Pearson r=0.835), exceeding VAE-reconstructed data (r=0.726), demonstrating faithful recovery of genetic association structures.
摘要: Motivation: Polygenic risk scores and other genomic analyses require large individual-level genotype datasets, yet strict data access restrictions impede sharing. Synthetic genotype generation offers a privacy-preserving alternative, but most existing methods operate unconditionally—producing samples without phenotype alignment—or rely on unsupervised compression, creating a gap between statistical fidelity and downstream task utility. Results: We present SNPgen, a two-stage conditional latent diffusion framework for generating phenotype-supervised synthetic genotypes. SNPgen combines GWAS-guided variant selection (1,024–2,048 trait-associated SNPs) with a variational autoencoder for genotype compression and a latent diffusion model conditioned on binary disease labels via classifier-free guidance. Evaluated on 458,724 UK Biobank individuals across four complex diseases (coronary artery disease, breast cancer, type 1 and type 2 diabetes), models trained on synthetic data matched real-data predictive performance in a train-on-synthetic, test-on-real protocol, approaching genome-wide PRS methods that use 2–6× more variants. Privacy analysis confirmed zero identical matches, near-random membership inference (AUC ≈ 0.50), preserved linkage disequilibrium structure, and high allele frequency correlation (r≥0.95) with source data. A controlled simulation with known causal effects verified faithful recovery of the imposed genetic association structure. Availability and implementation: Code available at https://github.com/ht-diva/SNPgen. Contact: andrea.lampis@polimi.it Supplementary information: Supplementary data are available in the Appendix.