A new algorithm for comparing and visualizing relationships between hierarchical and flat gene expression data clusterings

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Abstract

Motivation: Clustering is one of the most widely used methods in unsupervised gene expression data analysis. The use of different clustering algorithms or different parameters often produces rather different results on the same data. Biological interpretation of multiple clustering results requires understanding how different clusters relate to each other. It is particularly non-trivial to compare the results of a hierarchical and a flat, e.g. k-means, clustering. Results: We present a new method for comparing and visualizing relationships between different clustering results, either flat versus flat, or flat versus hierarchical. When comparing a flat clustering to a hierarchical clustering, the algorithm cuts different branches in the hierarchical tree at different levels to optimize the correspondence between the clusters. The optimization function is based on graph layout aesthetics or on mutual information. The clusters are displayed using a bipartite graph where the edges are weighted proportionally to the number of common elements in the respective clusters and the weighted number of crossings is minimized. The performance of the algorithm is tested using simulated and real gene expression data. The algorithm is implemented in the online gene expression data analysis tool Expression Profiler. © the Author 2005. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.

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Torrente, A., Kapushesky, M., & Brazma, A. (2005). A new algorithm for comparing and visualizing relationships between hierarchical and flat gene expression data clusterings. Bioinformatics, 21(21), 3993–3999. https://doi.org/10.1093/bioinformatics/bti644

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