Entering edit mode
Hi Francesco,
If I understand your question correctly: Normalization removes
background, probe and sample effects. Often batch effects are often
unaddressed by normalization. In contrast, most batch adjustment
methods do not address probe and background effects--so both tools are
needed for some datasets. For normalization (for Affy arrays) we
strongly recommend either SCAN or fRMA for normalization.
In terms of distortion, yes there is a chance that the signal could be
a little distorted by normalization and/or batch adjustment. Yes, a
normalization method that addresses batch at the same time might be a
little less likely to cause signal distortion. However in practice, a
two-step normalization/batch adjustment works just fine.
Hope this helps.
Evan
On Oct 10, 2013, at 5:17 AM,
francesco.brundu@gmail.com<mailto:francesco.brundu@gmail.com> wrote:
Hi all,
I have a question about running combat on microarray data.
In http://biostatistics.oxfordjournals.org/content/8/1/118.full it is
said that (3.1) 'We assume that the data have been normalized' before
batch correction.
My question is, what is intended here as normalization? Does not
normalization before batch correction distort the signal?
Thanks
~Francesco Brundu
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