April 9-10 2015, Auckland, NZ

We ran our third workshop at the University of Auckland, New Zealand. The event was organised by the Department of Statistics’ Statistical Consulting Centre. For more details go to the Statistical Consulting Centre’s Workshops web page.

There were 34 live and 6 online participants.

Coming up workshops: Brisbane (End of June 2015) and Paris (24-25 Sept 2015).

Our 34 participants in UoA

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‘It was very helpful, I learned a lot from it, Thank you very much Kim and your team !’

‘Excellent – very cutting-edge technology. Thanks!’

‘Good team. Excellent speaker, and the two assistant were very helpful’

‘It was great, thank you Kim-Anh, you explain very well and your slides are very clear’

Well done. I appreciate the effort going in to prepare the course material

The Oz mixOmics team in New Zealand

Sept 7, 2014, Strasbourg, FR

We ran our first mixOmics tutorial as part of the ECCB’14 conference in the beautiful city of Strasbourg. This one-day tutorial was a success and will be followed by other tutorials in 2014 and 2015.

We will run a two days tutorial in Toulouse, Oct 6-7 2014. Contact us for more information!

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ECCB’14 Tutorial on mixOmics

ECCB Tutorial T04. Multivariate methodologies for the exploration of large biological data sets. Application in R using the mixOmics package

Date: Sunday Sept 7, 2014
Venue: FORUM building, Faculté de Médecine, 4, rue Kirschleger, Strasbourg
Time: 9am – 5.30pm (registration starts from 8am)
Contact: mixomics[at]math.univ-toulouse.fr
More details: http://www.eccb14.org/program/tutorials/mixomics

 How to register: http://www.eccb14.org/registration Registration includes lunch & coffee breaks on the day of the workshop and the tutorial material (.pdf and/or print). ECCB Tutorial rates: 110 € (academic) or 60 € (student)

Description

The objective of this tutorial is to introduce the fundamental concepts behind projection-based approaches and illustrate their application on some exemplar studies using the R package mixOmics.

Multivariate projection approaches are useful exploratory tools to get a first understanding of large and complex data sets. These approaches are extremely efficient on large data sets, and can also answer complex questions. Such approaches include Principal Component Analysis (PCA, Joliffe 2002) and other variants, Partial Least Squares regression (PLS, Wold 2001), PLS-Discriminant Analysis, Canonical Correlation Analysis (CCA, Hotelling 1936). These approaches enable the reduction of the dimension of the data by projecting them into a smaller subspace. Recent developments proposed the so-called `sparse’ approaches, which include Lasso penalisations to allow variable selection (Tibshirani 2001).

PCA is the oldest and most popular multivariate technique but often, little is known about how this approach is solved and what are the limitations. More sophisticated approaches like PLS and CCA have recently been extended to deal with the large dimension (sparse PLS, or regularized CCA) and were proven to bring biologically meaningful results in many studies. Contrary to PCA, PLS and CCA enable the integration of two types of data sets.

Since 2009, we have implemented many multivariate approaches and their sparse variants in the R package mixOmics to be used by the statistical and bioinformatics community. Full tutorials are given on our website: http://perso.math.univ-toulouse.fr/mixomics/

In this tutorial, we will focus on the application of these approaches to medium and high throughput biological data (transcriptomics, metabolomics, proteomics data) using PCA, CCA, PLS, PLS-DA and the variants that the mixOmics team and collaborators have developed.

 

Presenters

The presenters are all key developers of mixOmics.

-Dr Kim-Anh Lê Cao (The University of Queensland Dimantina Insitute, Brisbane, Australia). Kim-Anh is a biostatistician researcher in the University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia. Her institute has a particular focus on severe and chronic diseases such as cancer and diseases involving the immune system, including arthritis, chronic infections, and diabetes. Together with the mixOmics team, Kim-Anh continues to develop methodologies to analyse complex biological studies.

-Dr Sébastien Déjean (Institut de Mathématiques de Toulouse, Université de Toulouse, France). Sebastien is a statistician research engineer in the Universite de Toulouse. Through his support activities to research, he contribues to various projects particularly in the fields of high throughput biology and information retrieval systems.

-Dr Ignacio González (Institut de Mathématiques de Toulouse, Université de Toulouse, Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique, France). Ignacio is working at the plateforme de bioinformatique et biostatistique de Toulouse. Ignacio has been working in several wet laboratories (INSERM, INRA, CNRS, INSA) where he provided statistical support. He has considerable experience in analyzing a vast range of biological data.

Target Audience

Postgraduate students, postdoctoral fellows and researchers with basic statistical knowledge, in need to

-explore large data sets

-use graphical techniques to better visualize data

– apply multivariate projection methodologies to large data sets.

Prerequisite and requirements

We expect the audience to have a good working knowledge in R. Attendees are requested to bring their own laptops, having installed the software RStudio http://www.rstudio.com/ and the R package mixOmics.