Literature DB >> 27514055

PhenoStacks: Cross-Sectional Cohort Phenotype Comparison Visualizations.

Michael Glueck, Alina Gvozdik, Fanny Chevalier, Azam Khan, Michael Brudno, Daniel Wigdor.   

Abstract

Cross-sectional phenotype studies are used by genetics researchers to better understand how phenotypes vary across patients with genetic diseases, both within and between cohorts. Analyses within cohorts identify patterns between phenotypes and patients (e.g., co-occurrence) and isolate special cases (e.g., potential outliers). Comparing the variation of phenotypes between two cohorts can help distinguish how different factors affect disease manifestation (e.g., causal genes, age of onset, etc.). PhenoStacks is a novel visual analytics tool that supports the exploration of phenotype variation within and between cross-sectional patient cohorts. By leveraging the semantic hierarchy of the Human Phenotype Ontology, phenotypes are presented in context, can be grouped and clustered, and are summarized via overviews to support the exploration of phenotype distributions. The design of PhenoStacks was motivated by formative interviews with genetics researchers: we distil high-level tasks, present an algorithm for simplifying ontology topologies for visualization, and report the results of a deployment evaluation with four expert genetics researchers. The results suggest that PhenoStacks can help identify phenotype patterns, investigate data quality issues, and inform data collection design.

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Year:  2016        PMID: 27514055     DOI: 10.1109/TVCG.2016.2598469

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  IEEE Trans Vis Comput Graph        ISSN: 1077-2626            Impact factor:   4.579


  4 in total

1.  Lineage: Visualizing Multivariate Clinical Data in Genealogy Graphs.

Authors:  Carolina Nobre; Nils Gehlenborg; Hilary Coon; Alexander Lex
Journal:  IEEE Trans Vis Comput Graph       Date:  2018-03-06       Impact factor: 4.579

2.  RAMPVIS: Answering the challenges of building visualisation capabilities for large-scale emergency responses.

Authors:  M Chen; A Abdul-Rahman; D Archambault; J Dykes; P D Ritsos; A Slingsby; T Torsney-Weir; C Turkay; B Bach; R Borgo; A Brett; H Fang; R Jianu; S Khan; R S Laramee; L Matthews; P H Nguyen; R Reeve; J C Roberts; F P Vidal; Q Wang; J Wood; K Xu
Journal:  Epidemics       Date:  2022-04-28       Impact factor: 5.324

Review 3.  Applying Precision Public Health to Prevent Preterm Birth.

Authors:  John P Newnham; Matthew W Kemp; Scott W White; Catherine A Arrese; Roger J Hart; Jeffrey A Keelan
Journal:  Front Public Health       Date:  2017-04-04

Review 4.  The Human Phenotype Ontology in 2017.

Authors:  Sebastian Köhler; Nicole A Vasilevsky; Mark Engelstad; Erin Foster; Julie McMurry; Ségolène Aymé; Gareth Baynam; Susan M Bello; Cornelius F Boerkoel; Kym M Boycott; Michael Brudno; Orion J Buske; Patrick F Chinnery; Valentina Cipriani; Laureen E Connell; Hugh J S Dawkins; Laura E DeMare; Andrew D Devereau; Bert B A de Vries; Helen V Firth; Kathleen Freson; Daniel Greene; Ada Hamosh; Ingo Helbig; Courtney Hum; Johanna A Jähn; Roger James; Roland Krause; Stanley J F Laulederkind; Hanns Lochmüller; Gholson J Lyon; Soichi Ogishima; Annie Olry; Willem H Ouwehand; Nikolas Pontikos; Ana Rath; Franz Schaefer; Richard H Scott; Michael Segal; Panagiotis I Sergouniotis; Richard Sever; Cynthia L Smith; Volker Straub; Rachel Thompson; Catherine Turner; Ernest Turro; Marijcke W M Veltman; Tom Vulliamy; Jing Yu; Julie von Ziegenweidt; Andreas Zankl; Stephan Züchner; Tomasz Zemojtel; Julius O B Jacobsen; Tudor Groza; Damian Smedley; Christopher J Mungall; Melissa Haendel; Peter N Robinson
Journal:  Nucleic Acids Res       Date:  2016-11-28       Impact factor: 16.971

  4 in total

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