Topological Biclustering Artmap for Identifying within Bicluster Relationships
Abstract
Biclustering is a powerful tool for exploratory data analysis in domains such as social networking, data reduction, and differential gene expression studies. Topological learning identifies connected regions that are difficult to find using other traditional clustering methods and produces a graphical representation. Therefore, to improve the quality of biclustering and module extraction, this work combines the adaptive resonance theory (ART)-based methods of biclustering ARTMAP (BARTMAP) and topological ART (TopoART), to produce TopoBARTMAP. The latter inherits the ability to detect topological associations while performing data reduction. The capabilities of TopoBARTMAP were benchmarked using 35 real world cancer datasets and contrasted with other (bi)clustering methods, where it showed a statistically significant improvement over the other assessed methods on ordered and shuffled data experiments. In experiments with 12 synthetic datasets, the method was observed to perform better at identifying constant, scale, shift, and shift scale type biclusters. The produced graphical representation was refined to represent gene bicluster associations and was assessed on the NCBI GSE89116 dataset containing expression levels of 39,326 probes sampled over 38 observations.
Recommended Citation
R. Yelugam et al., "Topological Biclustering Artmap for Identifying within Bicluster Relationships," Neural Networks, vol. 160, pp. 34 - 49, Elsevier, Mar 2023.
The definitive version is available at https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neunet.2022.12.010
Department(s)
Electrical and Computer Engineering
Keywords and Phrases
Adaptive Resonance Theory (Art); Biclustering; Gene Co-Expression; Gene Expression; Topological Data Analysis
International Standard Serial Number (ISSN)
1879-2782; 0893-6080
Document Type
Article - Journal
Document Version
Citation
File Type
text
Language(s)
English
Rights
© 2023 Elsevier, All rights reserved.
Publication Date
01 Mar 2023
PubMed ID
36621169
Comments
National Science Foundation, Grant FA8650-18-C-7831