Paper List
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SpikGPT: A High-Accuracy and Interpretable Spiking Attention Framework for Single-Cell Annotation
This paper addresses the core challenge of robust single-cell annotation across heterogeneous datasets with batch effects and the critical need to ide...
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Unlocking hidden biomolecular conformational landscapes in diffusion models at inference time
This paper addresses the core challenge of efficiently and accurately sampling the conformational landscape of biomolecules from diffusion-based struc...
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Personalized optimization of pediatric HD-tDCS for dose consistency and target engagement
This paper addresses the critical limitation of one-size-fits-all HD-tDCS protocols in pediatric populations by developing a personalized optimization...
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Realistic Transition Paths for Large Biomolecular Systems: A Langevin Bridge Approach
This paper addresses the core challenge of generating physically realistic and computationally efficient transition paths between distinct protein con...
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Consistent Synthetic Sequences Unlock Structural Diversity in Fully Atomistic De Novo Protein Design
This paper addresses the core pain point of low sequence-structure alignment in existing synthetic datasets (e.g., AFDB), which severely limits the pe...
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MoRSAIK: Sequence Motif Reactor Simulation, Analysis and Inference Kit in Python
This work addresses the computational bottleneck in simulating prebiotic RNA reactor dynamics by developing a Python package that tracks sequence moti...
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On the Approximation of Phylogenetic Distance Functions by Artificial Neural Networks
This paper addresses the core challenge of developing computationally efficient and scalable neural network architectures that can learn accurate phyl...
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EcoCast: A Spatio-Temporal Model for Continual Biodiversity and Climate Risk Forecasting
This paper addresses the critical bottleneck in conservation: the lack of timely, high-resolution, near-term forecasts of species distribution shifts ...
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.