Home  |   Login  |   Logout  |   Access Information  |   Alerts  |   Purchase History  |   Cart  |   Sitemap  |   Help   
 
Abstract
BROWSE SEARCH IEEE XPLORE GUIDE SUPPORT
arrow_leftView TOC   |arrow_leftPrevious Article   |  Next Articlearrow_right
Email/Printer Friendly Format  
 

Semantic Analysis of Genome Annotations using Weighting Schemes
Done, B.   Khatri, P.   Done, A.   Draghici, S.  
Dept. of Comput. Sci., Wayne State Univ., Detroit, MI;

This paper appears in: Computational Intelligence and Bioinformatics and Computational Biology, 2007. CIBCB '07. IEEE Symposium on
Publication Date: 1-5 April 2007
On page(s): 212-218
Location: Honolulu, HI,
ISBN: 1-4244-0710-9
INSPEC Accession Number: 9507427
Current Version Published: 2007-06-04

Abstract
The correct interpretation of many molecular biology experiments depends in an essential way on the accuracy and consistency of the existing annotation databases. Such databases are meant to act as repositories for our biological knowledge as we acquire and refine it. Hence, by definition they are incomplete at any given time. In this paper we describe a technique that improves our previous method for extracting implicit semantic relationships between genes and functions. We added a number of weighting schemes to our previous latent semantic indexing approach. We used this technique to analyze the current annotations of the human genome. The predictions of 15 different weighting schemes were compared and evaluated. Out of the top 50 functional annotations predicted using the best performing weighting scheme, we found support in the literature for 82% of them. For 10% of our prediction we did not find any relevant publications, and 6% were actually contradicted by existing literature. This weighting scheme also outperformed the simple binary scheme used in our previous approach. Our method is independent of the organism and can be used to analyze and improve the quality of the data of any public or private annotation database

Index Terms
Available to subscribers and IEEE members.

References
Available to subscribers and IEEE members.
Citing Documents
Available to subscribers and IEEE members.
You are not logged in.
Guests may access Abstract records free of charge.
Login
Username
Password
» Forgot your password?
Please remember to log out when you have finished your session.
You must log in to access:
• Advanced or Author Search
• CrossRef Search
• AbstractPlus Records
• Full Text PDF
• Full Text HTML
Access this document
Full Text: PDF (168 KB)
» Buy this document now
»  Learn more about
»  Learn more about
    purchasing articles
    and standards
Download this citation
Available to subscribers and IEEE members.
 
arrow_leftView TOC   |arrow_leftPrevious Article   |  Next Articlearrow_right   |  Back to toparrow_up
Indexed by IEE Inspec
© Copyright 2009 IEEE – All Rights Reserved