| Literature DB >> 31888436 |
Jérémy Amand1, Tobias Fehlmann1, Christina Backes1, Andreas Keller2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In many research disciplines, ordered lists are compared. One example is to compare a subset of all significant genes or proteins in a primary study to those in a replication study. Often, the top of the lists are compared using Venn diagrams, ore more precisely Euler diagrams (set diagrams showing logical relations between a finite collection of different sets). If different cohort sizes, different techniques or algorithms for evaluation were applied, a direct comparison of significant genes with a fixed threshold can however be misleading and approaches comparing lists would be more appropriate.Entities:
Keywords: Hypergeometric test; List overlap; Venn diagrams; Web server
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31888436 PMCID: PMC6937821 DOI: 10.1186/s12859-019-3320-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Bioinformatics ISSN: 1471-2105 Impact factor: 3.169
Fig. 1Results visualization of DynaVenn. Overview of the results using DynaVenn on the Alzheimer’s disease data set. The Venn diagram for the best combination of indices i and j is visualized, as well as the backtrace of p-values and the corresponding heat map
Fig. 2Toy examples. Four toy examples that demonstrate the ability and characteristics of the hypergeometric test in the context of gene list comparison. a Two identical lists. b The list and a randomly shuffled version of the list. c Complete list reversed. d The list with the head (20% reversed and the tail (80% reversed))