Forum:Looking For Biology Articles That Use Machine Learning Techniques
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11.8 years ago
Kate ▴ 370

I'd like to present an article at my computational biology lab's next journal club that involves machine learning techniques, to educate myself further on the subject, but I haven't made much progress in my search for one. Do you have any favorite articles that use a machine learning technique?

Thanks!

(Usually we talk about evolutionary processes (like determining demographic history from current SNP data) so bonus points if you know of an article from evolutionary biology :)

Update: Maybe I posted too soon... I just found this article on BioStar: Question: Bioinformatics and Machine Learning

machine-learning • 4.5k views
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11.8 years ago
Gjain 5.8k

Hi Kate,

Some of these nature primers might help you understand concept more (some statistical concepts also included):

you can find full list here

I hope this helps.

update: These papers will give you a general overview of machine learning in biology and bioinformatics

This tutorial is structured in four main components. Firstly, a brief section reviews definitions and mathematical prerequisites. Secondly, the field of supervised learning is described. Thirdly, methods of unsupervised learning are reviewed. Finally, a section reviews methods and examples as implemented in the open source data analysis and visualization language R

You can then read and learn about the specific topics from the paper and references mentioned.

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+1 for an awesome general resource, thanks! I'm excited to read about these topics in relation to biotechnology. I'll keep looking for specific papers, though.

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Your welcome. I see from your question that you are interested in evolutionary biology. Could you specify more about the work you are interested in to narrow down the topics.

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I made a quick edit to include what I'm currently working on and focus the question more on papers than general resources. Also, I should sheepishly admit, I'm really more interested in the machine learning side than the evolution side :)

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11.8 years ago

Listed because I'm a fan of their work, and they are also in close proximity to me.

(Edited to note that all of the work listed below is largely concerned with teasing out different elements of transcriptional regulation -- not so much evolutionary biology, which I missed you having mentioned in your question).

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It's really great to find out about work like this, thank you very much!

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11.8 years ago

You might check out the Weka project. I found it very useful when I was first learning about machine learning. And, they have almost 20 years worth of publications, making use of various techniques across many disciplines (including biology).

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Weka is pretty neat, I agree. I used it in the Machine Learning course I took to classify splice sites vs. non splice sites. (Though I was a little disappointed we didn't get to code anything ourselves). I didn't realize the group was so prolific, thanks!

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