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Discriminatio n Class web site: http://statwww.epfl.ch/davison/teaching/Microarr Statistics for Microarrays
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Page 1: Discrimination Class web site:  Statistics for Microarrays.

Discrimination

Class web site:

http://statwww.epfl.ch/davison/teaching/Microarrays/ETHZ/

Statistics for Microarrays

Page 2: Discrimination Class web site:  Statistics for Microarrays.

Biological questionDifferentially expressed genesSample class prediction etc.

Testing

Biological verification and interpretation

Microarray experiment

Estimation

Experimental design

Image analysis

Normalization

Clustering Discrimination

R, G

16-bit TIFF files

(Rfg, Rbg), (Gfg, Gbg)

Page 3: Discrimination Class web site:  Statistics for Microarrays.

cDNA gene expression data

Data on p genes for n samples

Genes

mRNA samples

Gene expression level of gene i in mRNA sample j

= (normalized) Log( Red intensity / Green intensity)

sample1 sample2 sample3 sample4 sample5 …

1 0.46 0.30 0.80 1.51 0.90 ...2 -0.10 0.49 0.24 0.06 0.46 ...3 0.15 0.74 0.04 0.10 0.20 ...4 -0.45 -1.03 -0.79 -0.56 -0.32 ...5 -0.06 1.06 1.35 1.09 -1.09 ...

Page 4: Discrimination Class web site:  Statistics for Microarrays.

Classification

• Task: assign objects to classes (groups) on the basis of measurements made on the objects

• Unsupervised: classes unknown, want to discover them from the data (cluster analysis)

• Supervised: classes are predefined, want to use a (training or learning) set of labeled objects to form a classifier for classification of future observations

Page 5: Discrimination Class web site:  Statistics for Microarrays.

Discrimination

• Objects (e.g. arrays) are to be classified as belonging to one of a number of predefined classes {1, 2, …, K}

• Each object associated with a class label (or response) Y {1, 2, …, K} and a feature vector (vector of predictor variables) of G measurements: X = (X1, …, XG)

• Aim: predict Y from X.

Page 6: Discrimination Class web site:  Statistics for Microarrays.

Example: Tumor Classification• Reliable and precise classification essential for

successful cancer treatment

• Current methods for classifying human malignancies rely on a variety of morphological, clinical and molecular variables

• Uncertainties in diagnosis remain; likely that existing classes are heterogeneous

• Characterize molecular variations among tumors by monitoring gene expression (microarray)

• Hope: that microarrays will lead to more reliable tumor classification (and therefore more appropriate treatments and better outcomes)

Page 7: Discrimination Class web site:  Statistics for Microarrays.

Tumor Classification Using Gene Expression Data

Three main types of statistical problems associated with tumor classification:

• Identification of new/unknown tumor classes using gene expression profiles (unsupervised learning – clustering)

• Classification of malignancies into known classes (supervised learning – discrimination)

• Identification of “marker” genes that characterize the different tumor classes (feature or variable selection).

Page 8: Discrimination Class web site:  Statistics for Microarrays.

Classifiers• A predictor or classifier partitions the space of

gene expression profiles into K disjoint subsets, A1, ..., AK, such that for a sample with expression profile X=(X1, ...,XG) Ak the predicted class is k

• Classifiers are built from a learning set (LS) L = (X1, Y1), ..., (Xn,Yn)

• Classifier C built from a learning set L: C( . ,L): X {1,2, ... ,K}

• Predicted class for observation X:C(X,L) = k if X is in Ak

Page 9: Discrimination Class web site:  Statistics for Microarrays.

Decision Theory (I)

• Can view classification as statistical decision theory: must decide which of the classes an object belongs to

• Use the observed feature vector X to aid in decision making

• Denote population proportion of objects of class k as k = p(Y = k)

• Assume objects in class k have feature vectors with density pk(X) = p(X|Y = k)

Page 10: Discrimination Class web site:  Statistics for Microarrays.

Decision Theory (II)

• One criterion for assessing classifier quality is the misclassification rate,

p(C(X)Y)

• A loss function L(i,j) quantifies the loss incurred by erroneously classifying a member of class i as class j

• The risk function R(C) for a classifier is the expected (average) loss:

R(C) = E[L(Y,C(X))]

Page 11: Discrimination Class web site:  Statistics for Microarrays.

Decision Theory (III)

• Typically L(i,i) = 0

• In many cases can assume symmetric loss with L(i,j) = 1 for i j (so that different types of errors are equivalent)

• In this case, the risk is simply the misclassification probability

• There are some important examples, such as in diagnosis, where the loss function is not symmetric

Page 12: Discrimination Class web site:  Statistics for Microarrays.

Maximum likelihood discriminant rule

• A maximum likelihood estimator (MLE) chooses the parameter value that makes the chance of the observations the highest

• For known class conditional densities pk(X), the maximum likelihood (ML) discriminant rule predicts the class of an observation X by

C(X) = argmaxk pk(X)

Page 13: Discrimination Class web site:  Statistics for Microarrays.

Fisher Linear Discriminant Analysis

First applied in 1935 by M. Barnard at the suggestion of R. A. Fisher (1936), Fisher linear discriminant analysis (FLDA):

1. finds linear combinations of the gene expression profiles X=X1,...,Xp with large ratios of between-groups to within-groups sums of squares - discriminant variables;

2. predicts the class of an observation X by the class whose mean vector is closest to X in terms of the discriminant variables

Page 14: Discrimination Class web site:  Statistics for Microarrays.

Gaussian ML Discriminant Rules

• For multivariate Gaussian (normal) class densities X|Y= k ~ N(k,k), the ML classifier is

C(X) = argmink {(X - k) k-1

(X - k)’ + log| k |}

• In general, this is a quadratic rule (Quadratic discriminant analysis, or QDA)

• In practice, population mean vectors k and covariance matrices k are estimated by corresponding sample quantities

Page 15: Discrimination Class web site:  Statistics for Microarrays.

Gaussian ML Discriminant Rules

• When all class densities have the same covariance matrix, k = the discriminant rule is linear (Linear discriminant analysis, or LDA; FLDA for k = 2):

C(X) = argmink (X - k) -1 (X - k)’

• When all class densities have the same diagonal covariance matrix =diag(1

2… G2),

the discriminant rule is again linear (Diagonal linear discriminant analysis, or DLDA)

Page 16: Discrimination Class web site:  Statistics for Microarrays.

Nearest Neighbor Classification

• Based on a measure of distance between observations (e.g. Euclidean distance or one minus correlation)

• k-nearest neighbor rule (Fix and Hodges (1951)) classifies an observation X as follows:– find the k observations in the learning set closest to

X– predict the class of X by majority vote, i.e., choose

the class that is most common among those k observations.

• The number of neighbors k can be chosen by cross-validation (more on this later)

Page 17: Discrimination Class web site:  Statistics for Microarrays.

Classification Trees

• Partition the feature space into a set of rectangles, then fit a simple model in each one

• Binary tree structured classifiers are constructed by repeated splits of subsets (nodes) of the measurement space X into two descendant subsets (starting with X itself)

• Each terminal subset is assigned a class label; the resulting partition of X corresponds to the classifier

Page 18: Discrimination Class web site:  Statistics for Microarrays.

Three Aspects of Tree Construction

• Split Selection Rule

• Split-stopping Rule

• Class assignment Rule

Different approaches to these three issues (e.g. CART: Classification And Regression Trees, Breiman et al. (1984); C4.5 and C5.0, Quinlan (1993)).

Page 19: Discrimination Class web site:  Statistics for Microarrays.

Three Rules (CART)

• Splitting: At each node, choose split maximizing decrease in impurity (e.g. Gini index, entropy, misclassification error)

• Split-stopping: Grow large tree, prune to obtain a sequence of subtrees, then use cross-validation to identify the subtree with lowest misclassification rate

• Class assignment: For each terminal node, choose the class minimizing the resubstitution estimate of misclassification probability, given that a case falls into this node

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Other Classifiers Include…

• Support vector machines (SVMs)

• Neural networks

• Bayesian regression methods

Page 25: Discrimination Class web site:  Statistics for Microarrays.

Features

• Feature selection– Automatic with trees– For DA, NN need preliminary selection– Need to account for selection when

assessing performance

• Missing data– Automatic imputation with trees– Otherwise, impute (or ignore)

Page 26: Discrimination Class web site:  Statistics for Microarrays.

Performance assessment (I)

• Resubstitution estimation: error rate on the learning set– Problem: downward bias

• Test set estimation: divide cases in learning set into two sets, L1 and L2; classifier built using L1, error rate computed for L2. L1 and L2 must be iid.– Problem: reduced effective sample

size

Page 27: Discrimination Class web site:  Statistics for Microarrays.

Performance assessment (II)

• V-fold cross-validation (CV) estimation: Cases in learning set randomly divided into V subsets of (nearly) equal size. Build classifiers leaving one set out; test set error rates computed on left out set and averaged. – Bias-variance tradeoff: smaller V can

give larger bias but smaller variance

• Out-of-bag estimation: covered below

Page 28: Discrimination Class web site:  Statistics for Microarrays.

Performance assessment (III)

• Common to do feature selection using all of the data, then CV only for model building and classification

• However, usually features are unknown and the intended inference includes feature selection. Then, CV estimates as above tend to be downward biased.

• Features should be selected only from the learning set used to build the model (and not the entire learning set)

Page 29: Discrimination Class web site:  Statistics for Microarrays.

Aggregating classifiers

• Breiman (1996, 1998) found that gains in accuracy could be obtained by aggregating predictors built from perturbed versions of the learning set; the multiple versions of the predictor are aggregated by voting.

• Let C(., Lb) denote the classifier built from the bth perturbed learning set Lb, and let wb denote the weight given to predictions made by this classifier. The predicted class for an observation x is given by

argmaxk ∑b wbI(C(x,Lb) = k)

Page 30: Discrimination Class web site:  Statistics for Microarrays.

Bagging• Bagging = Bootstrap aggregating

• Nonparametric Bootstrap (standard bagging): perturbed learning sets drawn at random with replacement from the learning sets; predictors built for each perturbed dataset and aggregated by plurality voting (wb = 1)

• Parametric Bootstrap: perturbed learning sets are multivariate Gaussian

• Convex pseudo-data (Breiman 1996)

Page 31: Discrimination Class web site:  Statistics for Microarrays.

Aggregation By-products: Out-of-bag estimation of error

rate

• Out-of-bag error rate estimate: unbiased

• Use the left out cases from each bootstrap sample as a test set

• Classify these test set cases, and compare to the class labels of the learning set to get the out-of-bag estimate of the error rate

Page 32: Discrimination Class web site:  Statistics for Microarrays.

Aggregation By-products: Case-wise information

• Class probability estimates (votes) (0,1): the proportion of votes for the “winning” class; gives a measure of prediction confidence

• Vote margins (–1,1) : the proportion of votes for the true class minus the maximum of the proportion of votes for each of the other classes; can be used to detect mislabeled (learning set) cases

Page 33: Discrimination Class web site:  Statistics for Microarrays.

Aggregation By-products: Variable Importance Statistics

• Measure of predictive power

• For each tree, randomly permute the values of the jth variable for the out-of-bag cases, use to get new classifications

• Several possible importance measures

Page 34: Discrimination Class web site:  Statistics for Microarrays.

Aggregation By-products: Intrinsic Case Proximities

• Proportion of trees for which cases i and j are in the same terminal node

• “Clustering”

• Outlier detection:

1/sum(squared proximities of cases in same class)

Page 35: Discrimination Class web site:  Statistics for Microarrays.

Boosting

• Freund and Schapire (1990, 1995), Breiman (1998)

• Data resampled adaptively so that the weights in the resampling are increased for those cases most often misclassified

• Predictor aggregation done by weighted voting

Page 36: Discrimination Class web site:  Statistics for Microarrays.

Comparison of classifiers

• Dudoit, Fridlyand, Speed (JASA, 2002)

• FLDA

• DLDA

• DQDA

• NN

• CART

• Bagging and boosting

Page 37: Discrimination Class web site:  Statistics for Microarrays.

Comparison study datasets

• Leukemia – Golub et al. (1999)n = 72 samples, G = 3,571 genes3 classes (B-cell ALL, T-cell ALL, AML)

• Lymphoma – Alizadeh et al. (2000)n = 81 samples, G = 4,682 genes3 classes (B-CLL, FL, DLBCL)

• NCI 60 – Ross et al. (2000)N = 64 samples, p = 5,244 genes8 classes

Page 38: Discrimination Class web site:  Statistics for Microarrays.

Leukemia data, 2 classes: Test set error rates;150 LS/TS runs

Page 39: Discrimination Class web site:  Statistics for Microarrays.

Leukemia data, 3 classes: Test set error rates;150 LS/TS runs

Page 40: Discrimination Class web site:  Statistics for Microarrays.

Lymphoma data, 3 classes: Test set error rates; N=150 LS/TS runs

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NCI 60 data :Test set error rates;150 LS/TS runs

Page 42: Discrimination Class web site:  Statistics for Microarrays.

Results• In the main comparison, NN and DLDA had the

smallest error rates, FLDA had the highest

• Aggregation improved the performance of CART classifiers, the largest gains being with boosting and bagging with convex pseudo-data

• For the lymphoma and leukemia datasets, increasing the number of genes to G=200 didn't greatly affect the performance of the various classifiers; there was an improvement for the NCI 60 dataset.

• More careful selection of a small number of genes (10) improved the performance of FLDA dramatically

Page 43: Discrimination Class web site:  Statistics for Microarrays.

Comparison study – Discussion (I)

• “Diagonal” LDA: ignoring correlation between genes helped here

• Unlike classification trees and nearest neighbors, LDA is unable to take into account gene interactions

• Although nearest neighbors are simple and intuitive classifiers, their main limitation is that they give very little insight into mechanisms underlying the class distinctions

Page 44: Discrimination Class web site:  Statistics for Microarrays.

Comparison study – Discussion (II)• Classification trees are capable of handling and

revealing interactions between variables

• Useful by-product of aggregated classifiers: prediction votes, variable importance statistics

• Variable selection: A crude criterion such as BSS/WSS may not identify the genes that discriminate between all the classes and may not reveal interactions between genes

• With larger training sets, expect improvement in performance of aggregated classifiers

Page 45: Discrimination Class web site:  Statistics for Microarrays.

Additional Comparisons

• Dettling and Bühlmann, improved the performance of boosting

• I will let them tell you more about that!

Page 46: Discrimination Class web site:  Statistics for Microarrays.

Acknowledgements

• Sandrine Dudoit

• Jane Fridlyand

• Yee Hwa (Jean) Yang

• Terry Speed