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Wolfgang Huber
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@wolfgang-huber-3550
Last seen 12 weeks ago
EMBL European Molecular Biology Laborat…
Dear Chintanu
ad 1.: the assumption is that the arrays that you compare study
similar
biological system, e.g. the same cell line treated with different
drugs,
such that the gene expression differences for most genes are
relatively
minor. The assumption would not hold if you compare, say, a cow liver
to
human glioblastoma.
ad 2.: I am not sure I understand your question, and maybe you need to
precisify it. The heatmap is a data exploration tool, there is no
single
right way to read it. For instance, in Fig 3.2. that you pointed to,
I'd
say there are three clusters (batches) of arrays, with two of them a
bit
more similar to each other than to the third.
Best wishes
Wolfgang
On Jul/31/10 8:04 AM, Chintanu wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I am unable to find answers to two queries based on a paper
> (*arrayQualityMetrics--a
> bioconductor package for quality assessment of microarray data*) and
a book
> (*Bioconductor Case Studies*). Wonder if anybody could help:
>
> 1. I understand that a heatmap is a representation of distances
between the
> arrays, where the median of the absolute values of the difference
between
> each array-pair is considered as a measure of distance. That is,
*Mxi *= *zi
> *+ *?**xi** *+ *?**xi* where *Mxi *and *Myi *represents the
*M*-value of the
> *i*th probe on the *x* and *y* array. For *?xi *, which represents
> differential expression effects, it is said that the majority of its
values
> are negligibly small (or close to zero). Why is it so ? Is this
because
> median/mean gene may possibly be assumed to be not expressed !!
Please let
> me know.
>
> 2. How to interpret a heatmap ? Let's say there is a heatmap of
same
> framework as that of Fig. 3.2, page 30 of the book, *Bioconductor
Case
> Studies* (http://tinyurl.com/2ervgpn). I understand that a heatmap
provides
> the distance matrix entries (dxy), and in expectation, all the
values
> of dxyare the same, namely 2-times the
> *?**xi*. However, what are the key elements in a figure such as Fig.
3.2 ?
> If the key elements are the tree-diagram on the top and the colour
scale on
> the right, then how to interpret them in the sense that (depending
on the
> diagram,) a set of one/more arrays can be declared as outlier
array(s). I
> have tried but failed to find any explanation.
>
> Your reply (replies) would be very helpful.
>
> Kind regards,
>
> Chintanu
>
> [[alternative HTML version deleted]]
>
>
>
>
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--
Wolfgang Huber
EMBL
http://www.embl.de/research/units/genome_biology/huber