TY - JOUR
T1 - Dimensionality reduction of longitudinal 'omics data using modern tensor factorizations
AU - Mor, Uria
AU - Cohen, Yotam
AU - Valdés-Mas, Rafael
AU - Kviatcovsky, Denise
AU - Elinav, Eran
AU - Avron, Haim
PY - 2022/7/15
Y1 - 2022/7/15
N2 - Longitudinal 'omics analytical methods are extensively used in the evolving field of precision medicine, by enabling 'big data' recording and high-resolution interpretation of complex datasets, driven by individual variations in response to perturbations such as disease pathogenesis, medical treatment or changes in lifestyle. However, inherent technical limitations in biomedical studies often result in the generation of feature-rich and sample-limited datasets. Analyzing such data using conventional modalities often proves to be challenging since the repeated, high-dimensional measurements overload the outlook with inconsequential variations that must be filtered from the data in order to find the true, biologically relevant signal. Tensor methods for the analysis and meaningful representation of multiway data may prove useful to the biological research community by their advertised ability to tackle this challenge. In this study, we present tcam-a new unsupervised tensor factorization method for the analysis of multiway data. Building on top of cutting-edge developments in the field of tensor-tensor algebra, we characterize the unique mathematical properties of our method, namely, 1) preservation of geometric and statistical traits of the data, which enable uncovering information beyond the inter-individual variation that often takes over the focus, especially in human studies. 2) Natural and straightforward out-of-sample extension, making tcam amenable for integration in machine learning workflows. A series of re-analyses of real-world, human experimental datasets showcase these theoretical properties, while providing empirical confirmation of tcam's utility in the analysis of longitudinal 'omics data.
AB - Longitudinal 'omics analytical methods are extensively used in the evolving field of precision medicine, by enabling 'big data' recording and high-resolution interpretation of complex datasets, driven by individual variations in response to perturbations such as disease pathogenesis, medical treatment or changes in lifestyle. However, inherent technical limitations in biomedical studies often result in the generation of feature-rich and sample-limited datasets. Analyzing such data using conventional modalities often proves to be challenging since the repeated, high-dimensional measurements overload the outlook with inconsequential variations that must be filtered from the data in order to find the true, biologically relevant signal. Tensor methods for the analysis and meaningful representation of multiway data may prove useful to the biological research community by their advertised ability to tackle this challenge. In this study, we present tcam-a new unsupervised tensor factorization method for the analysis of multiway data. Building on top of cutting-edge developments in the field of tensor-tensor algebra, we characterize the unique mathematical properties of our method, namely, 1) preservation of geometric and statistical traits of the data, which enable uncovering information beyond the inter-individual variation that often takes over the focus, especially in human studies. 2) Natural and straightforward out-of-sample extension, making tcam amenable for integration in machine learning workflows. A series of re-analyses of real-world, human experimental datasets showcase these theoretical properties, while providing empirical confirmation of tcam's utility in the analysis of longitudinal 'omics data.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85135382631&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1010212
DO - 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1010212
M3 - Article
SN - 1553-734X
VL - 18
JO - PLoS Computational Biology
JF - PLoS Computational Biology
IS - 7
M1 - e1010212
ER -