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Creating robust, reliable, clinically relevant classifiers from spectroscopic data.

R L Somorjai1

  • 1Biomedical Informatics Group, Institute for Biodiagnostics, National Research Council Canada, 435 Ellice Ave., Winnipeg, MB, R3B 1Y6, Canada. Ray.Somorjai@nrc-cnrc.gc.ca.

Biophysical Reviews
|May 17, 2017
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

The Statistical Classification Strategy (SCS) enhances disease discrimination using spectral data. This method reliably identifies diseases and metabolite interactions, improving diagnostic accuracy for biomedical data analysis.

Keywords:
BootstrapClassifier developmentCrossvalidationDissimilarity/distance measureFeature selectionGenetic algorithmMetabolite mixtureSpectral signatureStatistical classification strategy

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Area of Science:

  • Biomedical data analysis
  • Spectroscopy
  • Machine learning

Background:

  • Current MR spectroscopy practices lack robust feature extraction and classifier development.
  • Statistical Classification Strategy (SCS) was initially developed for MR and IR spectra analysis.
  • SCS has been extended for broader biomedical data analysis.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To detail the feature extraction and classifier development in SCS.
  • To compare SCS with current MR spectroscopy practices.
  • To enable reliable disease discrimination using spectral data.

Main Methods:

  • Data-driven Statistical Classification Strategy (SCS) for feature extraction and classifier development.
  • Identifying spectral features that retain identity and relate to metabolites.
  • Developing classifiers with sustained accuracy on new samples.
  • Analyzing metabolite-metabolite interactions.

Main Results:

  • SCS provides a detailed framework for feature extraction and classifier development.
  • The approach allows for reliable discrimination of diseases and disease states.
  • Classifiers demonstrate robustness with new, unknown samples.
  • Potential for detecting metabolite-metabolite interactions.

Conclusions:

  • SCS offers a robust method for analyzing biomedical spectral data.
  • A two-phase diagnostic approach is recommended: initial diagnosis followed by biomarker research for prognosis.
  • Further objective comparisons are needed between spectral signatures and metabolite concentrations for feature selection.