mogsa-package: Multiple omics clustering and gene set analysis

Description Details Author(s) References Examples

Description

Modern "omics" technologies enable quantitative monitoring of the abundance of various biological molecules in a high-throughput manner, accumulating an unprecedented amount of quantitative information on a genomic scale. Gene set analysis is a particularly useful method in high throughput data analysis since it can summarize single gene level information into the biological informative gene set levels. This package provide a method do the gene set analysis based on multiple omics data that describing the same set of observations/samples.

Details

Package: mogsa
Type: Package
Version: 1.3.1
Date: 2016-01-19
License: GPL-2
Depends: methods

The main function in the package is "mogsa", see the function help manu for more details.

Author(s)

Chen Meng Maintainer: Chen Meng <chen.meng@tum.de>

References

Chen Meng, Dominic Helm, Martin Frejno, and Bernhard Kuster. moCluster: Identifying Joint Patterns Across Multiple Omics Data Sets. Journal of Proteome Research 2016.

Examples

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  # library(mogsa)
  # loading gene expression data and supplementary data
  data(NCI60_4array_supdata)
  data(NCI60_4arrays)

  # using a list of data.frame as input
  mgsa1 <- mogsa(x = NCI60_4arrays, sup=NCI60_4array_supdata, nf=9,
                 proc.row = "center_ssq1", w.data = "inertia", statis = TRUE)
  # using moa as input
  ana <- moa(NCI60_4arrays, proc.row = "center_ssq1", w.data = "inertia", statis = TRUE)
  smoa <- sup.moa(ana, sup=NCI60_4array_supdata, nf=3)
  mgsa2 <- mogsa(x = ana, sup=NCI60_4array_supdata, nf=9)
  mgsa3 <- mogsa(x = ana, sup=smoa)

Example output

x is an object of "moa", statis is not usedx is an object of "moa", statis is not used

mogsa documentation built on Nov. 8, 2020, 5:41 p.m.