Network properties of intrinsically multivariate predictive genes Conference Paper uri icon

abstract

  • A set of predictor genes is said to be intrinsically multi-variate predictive (IMP) for a target gene if all properly contained subsets of the predictor set are bad predictors of the target but the full predictor set predicts the target with great accuracy. A basic measure of the predictive power of a set of genes with respect to the target is the Coefficient of Determination (CoD). In a previous paper, we described analytically the main properties of IMP genes introducing the IMP score, a metric based on the Coefficient of Determination (CoD) as a measure of predictive-ness of the target gene. Basically, the IMP score depends on four main properties: logic of connection, predictive power, covariance between predictors, and marginal predictor probabilities (biases). This paper presents briefly a simulation study that seeks to capture correlations between IMP score and network properties. The results confirmed facts that were known previously from our analytic study, as well as new properties, such as the fact that gene "territory" size has positive correlation with IMP score. 2008 IEEE.

name of conference

  • 2008 IEEE International Workshop on Genomic Signal Processing and Statistics

published proceedings

  • 2008 IEEE INTERNATIONAL WORKSHOP ON GENOMIC SIGNAL PROCESSING AND STATISTICS

author list (cited authors)

  • Martins-D, C. J., Braga-Neto, U., Bittner, M. L., & Dougherty, E. R.

citation count

  • 0

complete list of authors

  • Martins-D, C Jr||Braga-Neto, U||Bittner, ML||Dougherty, ER

publication date

  • January 2008