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Related Concept Videos

Prediction Intervals01:03

Prediction Intervals

The interval estimate of any variable is known as the prediction interval. It helps decide if a point estimate is dependable.
However, the point estimate is most likely not the exact value of the population parameter, but close to it. After calculating point estimates, we construct interval estimates, called confidence intervals or prediction intervals. This prediction interval comprises a range of values unlike the point estimate and is a better predictor of the observed sample value, y. 
The...
Improving Translational Accuracy02:07

Improving Translational Accuracy

Base complementarity between the three base pairs of mRNA codon and the tRNA anticodon is not a failsafe mechanism. Inaccuracies can range from a single mismatch to no correct base pairing at all. The free energy difference between the correct and nearly correct base pairs can be as small as 3 kcal/ mol. With complementarity being the only proofreading step, the estimated error frequency would be one wrong amino acid in every 100 amino acids incorporated. However, error frequencies observed in...
Improving Translational Accuracy02:07

Improving Translational Accuracy

Base complementarity between the three base pairs of mRNA codon and the tRNA anticodon is not a failsafe mechanism. Inaccuracies can range from a single mismatch to no correct base pairing at all. The free energy difference between the correct and nearly correct base pairs can be as small as 3 kcal/ mol. With complementarity being the only proofreading step, the estimated error frequency would be one wrong amino acid in every 100 amino acids incorporated. However, error frequencies observed in...
Regression Analysis01:11

Regression Analysis

Regression analysis is a statistical tool that describes a mathematical relationship between a dependent variable and one or more independent variables.
In regression analysis, a regression equation is determined based on the line of best fit– a line that best fits the data points plotted in a graph. This line is also called the regression line. The algebraic equation for the regression line is called the regression equation. It is represented as:
One-Compartment Open Model: Wagner-Nelson and Loo Riegelman Method for ka Estimation01:24

One-Compartment Open Model: Wagner-Nelson and Loo Riegelman Method for ka Estimation

This lesson introduces two critical methods in pharmacokinetics, the Wagner-Nelson and Loo-Riegelman methods, used for estimating the absorption rate constant (ka) for drugs administered via non-intravenous routes. The Wagner-Nelson method relates ka to the plasma concentration derived from the slope of a semilog percent unabsorbed time plot. However, it is limited to drugs with one-compartment kinetics and can be impacted by factors like gastrointestinal motility or enzymatic degradation.
On...
Sensitivity, Specificity, and Predicted Value01:13

Sensitivity, Specificity, and Predicted Value

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Related Experiment Videos

A ν-support vector regression based approach for predicting imputation quality.

Yi-Hung Huang1, John P Rice, Scott F Saccone

  • 1Institute of Information Science, Academia Sinica, Taipei 115, Taiwan. irashadow@gmail.com.

BMC Proceedings
|November 24, 2012
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

A new regression model accurately estimates imputation quality scores (IQS) for genomic data, enabling better reuse of existing genetic datasets for large-scale studies. This method improves the reliability of imputation quality assessment in genome-wide association studies (GWAS).

Related Experiment Videos

Area of Science:

  • Genomics
  • Bioinformatics
  • Statistical Genetics

Background:

  • Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) generate vast genomic data, but varying genotyping platforms hinder data integration.
  • Imputation is necessary to combine data from different platforms, but current quality assessment methods are unreliable.
  • Existing imputation quality scores (IQS) require true alleles, limiting their reuse for previously generated data.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To develop a reliable method for estimating imputation quality scores (IQS) without requiring true alleles.
  • To enable the effective reuse of existing genomic data from diverse genotyping platforms for meta-analysis and secondary analyses.
  • To improve the accuracy of quality assessment in genomic data imputation.

Main Methods:

  • A regression model was developed to predict IQS based on features like minor allele frequencies and distance to crossover hotspots.
  • The model was trained using imputation data with known alleles.
  • Evaluation involved estimating IQS for imputed GWAS data from various ethnic populations using the BEAGLE imputation algorithm.

Main Results:

  • A ν-SVR based regression model achieved mean square errors below 0.02 and a correlation coefficient near 0.75 across different imputation scenarios.
  • The developed regression model demonstrates robust performance in estimating IQS.
  • The study shows the utility of regression results in reducing false positives in association studies.

Conclusions:

  • Reliable IQS estimation is crucial for integrating and reusing existing genomic data for meta-analysis.
  • A small set of features can effectively predict IQS by learning from imputation and IQS pairs.
  • This approach facilitates the broader application of existing genomic datasets.