Comparar métodos
Examine os métodos selecionados lado a lado; as linhas que diferem ficam destacadas.
| Análise de Metabolômica Assistida por Aprendizado de Máquina× | Random Forest× | |
|---|---|---|
| Área≠ | Bioinformática | Aprendizado de máquina |
| Família≠ | Process / pipeline | Machine learning |
| Ano de origem≠ | 2000s–2010s (rapid adoption 2015–present) | 2001 |
| Autor original≠ | Convergent development; foundational reviews by Liebal et al. (2020) and earlier multivariate metabolomics work by Trygg, Holmes, and Nicholson | Breiman, L. |
| Tipo≠ | Integrative analytical pipeline | Ensemble (bagging of decision trees) |
| Fonte seminal≠ | Liebal, U. W., Phan, A. N. T., Sudhakar, M., Raman, K., & Blank, L. M. (2020). Machine learning applications for mass spectrometry-based metabolomics. Metabolites, 10(6), 243. DOI ↗ | Breiman, L. (2001). Random Forests. Machine Learning, 45, 5–32. DOI ↗ |
| Outros nomes | ML-metabolomics, chemoinformatics ML, metabolite profiling with machine learning, ML-driven metabolic profiling | Rastgele Orman (Random Forest), rastgele orman, random decision forest, bagged tree ensemble |
| Relacionados≠ | 1 | 4 |
| Resumo≠ | Machine learning-assisted metabolomics analysis is an integrative bioinformatics pipeline that couples untargeted or targeted metabolite profiling — via mass spectrometry or NMR — with supervised and unsupervised ML algorithms to discover biomarkers, classify phenotypes, and model metabolic states. By handling the extreme dimensionality and collinearity inherent in metabolomics datasets (hundreds to thousands of features, tens to hundreds of samples), ML methods such as random forests, support vector machines, and neural networks extract biologically interpretable patterns that classical univariate statistics routinely miss. | Random Forest is an ensemble learning method, introduced by Leo Breiman in 2001, that grows many decision trees on bootstrap samples of the data and combines their votes to produce strong classification and regression. By pooling many slightly different trees, it produces more accurate and more stable predictions than any single tree. |
| ScholarGateConjunto de dados ↗ |
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