Paper List
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The Effective Reproduction Number in the Kermack-McKendrick model with age of infection and reinfection
This paper addresses the challenge of accurately estimating the time-varying effective reproduction number ℛ(t) in epidemics by incorporating two crit...
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Covering Relations in the Poset of Combinatorial Neural Codes
This work addresses the core challenge of navigating the complex poset structure of neural codes to systematically test the conjecture linking convex ...
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Collective adsorption of pheromones at the water-air interface
This paper addresses the core challenge of understanding how amphiphilic pheromones, previously assumed to be transported in the gas phase, can be sta...
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pHapCompass: Probabilistic Assembly and Uncertainty Quantification of Polyploid Haplotype Phase
This paper addresses the core challenge of accurately assembling polyploid haplotypes from sequencing data, where read assignment ambiguity and an exp...
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Setting up for failure: automatic discovery of the neural mechanisms of cognitive errors
This paper addresses the core challenge of automating the discovery of biologically plausible recurrent neural network (RNN) dynamics that can replica...
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Influence of Object Affordance on Action Language Understanding: Evidence from Dynamic Causal Modeling Analysis
This study addresses the core challenge of moving beyond correlational evidence to establish the *causal direction* and *temporal dynamics* of how obj...
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Revealing stimulus-dependent dynamics through statistical complexity
This paper addresses the core challenge of detecting stimulus-specific patterns in neural population dynamics that remain hidden to traditional variab...
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Exactly Solvable Population Model with Square-Root Growth Noise and Cell-Size Regulation
This paper addresses the fundamental gap in understanding how microscopic growth fluctuations, specifically those with size-dependent (square-root) no...
Probabilistic Joint and Individual Variation Explained (ProJIVE) for Data Integration
Department of Biostatistics and Bioinformatics, Rollins School of Public Health, Emory University | Department of Radiology and Imaging Sciences, Emory University School of Medicine
30秒速读
IN SHORT: This paper addresses the core challenge of accurately decomposing shared (joint) and dataset-specific (individual) sources of variation in multi-modal datasets, where existing methods often lack a formal statistical model, leading to potential inaccuracies and interpretability issues.
核心创新
- Methodology Introduces ProJIVE, a novel probabilistic model that extends Probabilistic PCA (pPCA) to the JIVE framework, formally modeling joint and individual subject scores as random effects.
- Methodology Develops a unified Expectation-Maximization (EM) algorithm for maximum likelihood estimation, simultaneously inferring all model parameters (loadings, scores, noise variances), unlike multi-step decomposition approaches.
- Biology Successfully applies the model to integrate brain morphometry and cognitive data from the ADNI cohort, demonstrating that the extracted joint scores strongly correlate with established but expensive Alzheimer's disease biomarkers (e.g., amyloid PET, FDG-PET, ApoE4 status).
主要结论
- ProJIVE's maximum likelihood estimation via EM achieved greater accuracy in estimating latent scores and variable loadings compared to R.JIVE, AJIVE, and GIPCA across various simulation settings, including non-Gaussian data.
- In the ADNI application, the joint subject scores derived from brain morphometry and cognition data showed strong statistical associations with key Alzheimer's disease variables, validating the biological relevance of the extracted shared variation.
- The model provides a formal statistical framework where quantities like joint subject scores (potential prodromes) and variable loadings (drivers of variation) are directly modeled, enhancing interpretability over algorithmic decompositions.
摘要: Collecting multiple types of data on the same set of subjects is common in modern scientific applications including genomics, metabolomics, and neuroimaging. Joint and Individual Variation Explained (JIVE) seeks a low-rank approximation of the joint variation between two or more sets of features captured on common subjects and isolates this variation from that unique to each set of features. We develop an expectation-maximization (EM) algorithm to estimate a probabilistic model for the JIVE framework. The model extends probabilistic PCA to multiple datasets. Our maximum likelihood approach simultaneously estimates joint and individual components, which can lead to greater accuracy compared to other methods. We apply ProJIVE to measures of brain morphometry and cognition in Alzheimer’s disease. ProJIVE learns biologically meaningful sources of variation, and the joint morphometry and cognition subject scores are strongly related to more expensive existing biomarkers. Data used in preparation of this article were obtained from the Alzheimer’s Disease Neuroimaging Initiative (ADNI) database. Code to reproduce the analysis is available at https://github.com/thebrisklab/ProJIVE. Supplementary materials for this article are available online.