Linganisha mbinu
Pitia mbinu ulizochagua bega kwa bega; safu zinazotofautiana zinaangaziwa.
| Utafiti wa Uunganishaji wa Epigenome kwa Msaada wa ML (ML-EWAS)× | Msitu Nasibu× | |
|---|---|---|
| Nyanja≠ | Bioinformatiki | Ujifunzaji wa Mashine |
| Familia≠ | Process / pipeline | Machine learning |
| Mwaka wa asili≠ | 2010s (methodological consolidation ~2015–2020) | 2001 |
| Mwanzilishi≠ | Teschendorff, Relton, and others in the epigenomics field | Breiman, L. |
| Aina≠ | Integrative omics analysis pipeline | Ensemble (bagging of decision trees) |
| Chanzo asilia≠ | Teschendorff, A. E., & Relton, C. L. (2018). Statistical and integrative system-level analysis of DNA methylation data. Nature Reviews Genetics, 19(3), 129–147. link ↗ | Breiman, L. (2001). Random Forests. Machine Learning, 45, 5–32. DOI ↗ |
| Majina mbadala | ML-EWAS, machine learning EWAS, ML-assisted EWAS, epigenome-wide association study with machine learning | Rastgele Orman (Random Forest), rastgele orman, random decision forest, bagged tree ensemble |
| Zinazohusiana≠ | 3 | 4 |
| Muhtasari≠ | Machine learning-assisted EWAS integrates conventional epigenome-wide association testing with machine learning models to identify DNA methylation sites associated with a phenotype of interest. By combining the statistical rigour of EWAS with the pattern-recognition power of algorithms such as elastic net, random forest, or gradient boosting, this approach handles the extreme dimensionality of methylation arrays (450,000–850,000 CpG sites) more effectively than univariate testing alone, and can capture non-linear and interaction effects that standard linear models 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. |
| ScholarGateSeti ya data ↗ |
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