Introduction

The Bayesian regularization method for high-throughput differential analysis, described in Baldi and Long (A Bayesian framework for the analysis of microarray expression data: regularized t-test and statistical inferences of gene changes. Bioinformatics 2001: 17: 509-519) and implemented in the Cyber-T web server, is one of the most widely validated. Cyber-T implements a t-test using a Bayesian framework to compute a regularized variance of the measurements associated with each probe under each condition. This regularized estimate is derived by flexibly combining the empirical measurements with a prior, or background, derived from pooling measurements associated with probes in the same neighborhood. This approach flexibly addresses problems associated with low replication levels and technology biases, not only for DNA microarrays, but also for other technologies, such as protein arrays, quantitative mass spectrometry and next-generation sequencing (RNA-seq). Here we present an update to the Cyber-T web server, incorporating several useful new additions and improvements. Several preprocessing data normalization options including logarithmic and (Variance Stabilizing Normalization) VSN transforms are included. To augment two-sample t-tests, a one-way analysis of variance is implemented. Several methods for multiple tests correction, including standard frequentist methods and a probabilistic mixture model treatment, are available. Diagnostic plots allow visual assessment of the results. The web server provides comprehensive documentation and example data sets. The Cyber-T web server, with R source code and data sets, is publicly available at http://cybert.ics.uci.edu/.

Publications

  1. Cyber-T web server: differential analysis of high-throughput data.
    Cite this
    Kayala MA, Baldi P, 2012-07-01 - Nucleic acids research
  2. A Bayesian framework for the analysis of microarray expression data: regularized t -test and statistical inferences of gene changes.
    Cite this
    Baldi P, Long AD, 2001-06-01 - Bioinformatics (Oxford, England)

Credits

  1. Matthew A Kayala
    Developer

    Department of Computer Science and Institute for Genomics and Bioinformatics, University of California, United States of America

  2. Pierre Baldi
    Investigator

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Summary
AccessionBT001554
Tool TypeApplication
Category
PlatformsLinux/Unix
TechnologiesR
User InterfaceTerminal Command Line
Download Count0
Submitted ByPierre Baldi