I have seen a recurring trend that FPKM values tend to be highly variable/volatile quantities across samples. For example, for the same transcript of a given gene, an FPKM value for this transcript could be 10 or 15 or 5 (across three samples analyzed by Cufflinks, for example).
How does one computationally handle the variability in FPKM value? How "real" are these values and how much can one trust them in a lab setting?
+1 for great response. Yes, when you say that FPKM values are estimates that have errors associated with them due to many reasons, could you please name some of those reasons (and cite a relevant publication)?
Reasons for errors - Off the top of my head :
See this figure from the DESeq paper and, of course, the accompanying paper: http://genomebiology.com/2010/11/10/R106/figure/F7