DocumentCode
3408366
Title
A self-tuning method for one-chip SNP identification
Author
Molla, Michael ; Shavlik, Jude ; Albert, Thomas ; Richmond, Todd ; Smith, Steven
Author_Institution
Wisconsin Univ., Madison, WI, USA
fYear
2004
fDate
16-19 Aug. 2004
Firstpage
69
Lastpage
79
Abstract
Current methods for interpreting oligonucleotide-based SNP-detection microarrays, SNP chips, are based on statistics and require extensive parameter tuning as well as extremely high-resolution images of the chip being processed. We present a method, based on a simple data-classification technique called nearest-neighbors that, on haploid organisms, produces results comparable to the published results of the leading statistical methods and requires very little in the way of parameter tuning. Furthermore, it can interpret SNP chips using lower-resolution scanners of the type more typically used in current microarray experiments. Along with our algorithm, we present the results of a SNP-detection experiment where, when independently applying this algorithm to six identical SARS SNP chips, we correctly identify all 24 SNPs in a particular strain of the SARS virus, with between 6 and 13 false positives across the six experiments.
Keywords
biology computing; genetics; molecular biophysics; polymorphism; SARS single nucleotide polymorphism chips; data-classification technique; haploid organisms; lower-resolution scanners; nearest-neighbors method; oligonucleotide-based single nucleotide polymorphism-detection microarrays; one-chip single nucleotide polymorphism identification; parameter tuning; self-tuning method; statistical methods; Bioinformatics; Capacitive sensors; DNA; Databases; Genomics; Organisms; Probes; Statistical analysis; Statistics; Tuning;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Computational Systems Bioinformatics Conference, 2004. CSB 2004. Proceedings. 2004 IEEE
Print_ISBN
0-7695-2194-0
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/CSB.2004.1332419
Filename
1332419
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