dRWRpipeline
is supposed to estimate sample relationships (ie.
contact strength between samples) from an input gene-sample matrix and
an input graph. The pipeline includes: 1) random walk restart (RWR) of
the input graph using the input matrix as seeds; 2) calculation of
contact strength (inner products of RWR-smoothed columns of input
matrix); 3) estimation of the contact signficance by a randomalisation
procedure. It supports two methods how to use RWR: 'direct' for
directly applying RWR in the given seeds; 'indirectly' for first
pre-computing affinity matrix of the input graph, and then deriving the
affinity score. Parallel computing is also supported for Linux or Mac
operating systems.
dRWRpipeline(
data,
g,
method = c("direct", "indirect"),
normalise = c("laplacian", "row", "column", "none"),
restart = 0.75,
normalise.affinity.matrix = c("none", "quantile"),
permutation = c("random", "degree"),
num.permutation = 10,
p.adjust.method = c("BH", "BY", "bonferroni", "holm", "hochberg",
"hommel"),
adjp.cutoff = 0.05,
parallel = TRUE,
multicores = NULL,
verbose = T
)
an input gene-sample data matrix used for seeds. Each value in input gene-sample matrix does not necessarily have to be binary (non-zeros will be used as a weight, but should be non-negative for easy interpretation).
an object of class "igraph" or "graphNEL"
the method used to calculate RWR. It can be 'direct' for directly applying RWR, 'indirect' for indirectly applying RWR (first pre-compute affinity matrix and then derive the affinity score)
the way to normalise the adjacency matrix of the input graph. It can be 'laplacian' for laplacian normalisation, 'row' for row-wise normalisation, 'column' for column-wise normalisation, or 'none'
the restart probability used for RWR. The restart probability takes the value from 0 to 1, controlling the range from the starting nodes/seeds that the walker will explore. The higher the value, the more likely the walker is to visit the nodes centered on the starting nodes. At the extreme when the restart probability is zero, the walker moves freely to the neighbors at each step without restarting from seeds, i.e., following a random walk (RW)
the way to normalise the output affinity matrix. It can be 'none' for no normalisation, 'quantile' for quantile normalisation to ensure that columns (if multiple) of the output affinity matrix have the same quantiles
how to do permutation. It can be 'degree' for degree-preserving permutation, 'random' for permutation in random
the number of permutations used to for generating the distribution of contact strength under randomalisation
the method used to adjust p-values. It can be one of "BH", "BY", "bonferroni", "holm", "hochberg" and "hommel". The first two methods "BH" (widely used) and "BY" control the false discovery rate (FDR: the expected proportion of false discoveries amongst the rejected hypotheses); the last four methods "bonferroni", "holm", "hochberg" and "hommel" are designed to give strong control of the family-wise error rate (FWER). Notes: FDR is a less stringent condition than FWER
the cutoff of adjusted pvalue to construct the contact graph
logical to indicate whether parallel computation with
multicores is used. By default, it sets to true, but not necessarily
does so. It will depend on whether these two packages "foreach" and
"doParallel" have been installed. It can be installed via:
source("http://bioconductor.org/biocLite.R");
biocLite(c("foreach","doParallel"))
. If not yet installed, this option
will be disabled
an integer to specify how many cores will be registered as the multicore parallel backend to the 'foreach' package. If NULL, it will use a half of cores available in a user's computer. This option only works when parallel computation is enabled
logical to indicate whether the messages will be displayed in the screen. By default, it sets to true for display
an object of class "dContact", a list with following components:
ratio
: a symmetric matrix storing ratio (the observed
against the expected) between pairwise samples
zscore
: a symmetric matrix storing zscore between pairwise
samples
pval
: a symmetric matrix storing pvalue between pairwise
samples
adjpval
: a symmetric matrix storing adjusted pvalue
between pairwise samples
cgraph
: the constructed contact graph (as a 'igraph'
object) under the cutoff of adjusted value
Amatrix
: a pre-computated affinity matrix when using
'inderect' method; NULL otherwise
call
: the call that produced this result
# NOT RUN {
# 1) generate a random graph according to the ER model
g <- erdos.renyi.game(100, 1/100)
# 2) produce the induced subgraph only based on the nodes in query
subg <- dNetInduce(g, V(g), knn=0)
V(subg)$name <- 1:vcount(subg)
# 3) estimate RWR dating based sample relationships
# define sets of seeds as data
# each seed with equal weight (i.e. all non-zero entries are '1')
aSeeds <- c(1,0,1,0,1)
bSeeds <- c(0,0,1,0,1)
data <- data.frame(aSeeds,bSeeds)
rownames(data) <- 1:5
# calcualte their two contact graph
dContact <- dRWRpipeline(data=data, g=subg, parallel=FALSE)
dContact
# }
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