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An eQTL biological data visualization challenge and approaches from the visualization community

In 2011, the IEEE VisWeek conferences inaugurated a symposium on Biological Data Visualization. Like other domain-oriented Vis symposia, this symposium's purpose was to explore the unique characteristics and requirements of visualization within the domain, and to enhance both the Visualization...

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Autores principales: Bartlett, Christopher W, Yeon Cheong, Soo, Hou, Liping, Paquette, Jesse, Yee Lum, Pek, Jäger, Günter, Battke, Florian, Vehlow, Corinna, Heinrich, Julian, Nieselt, Kay, Sakai, Ryo, Aerts, Jan, Ray, William C
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3355334/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22607587
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2105-13-S8-S8
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author Bartlett, Christopher W
Yeon Cheong, Soo
Hou, Liping
Paquette, Jesse
Yee Lum, Pek
Jäger, Günter
Battke, Florian
Vehlow, Corinna
Heinrich, Julian
Nieselt, Kay
Sakai, Ryo
Aerts, Jan
Ray, William C
author_facet Bartlett, Christopher W
Yeon Cheong, Soo
Hou, Liping
Paquette, Jesse
Yee Lum, Pek
Jäger, Günter
Battke, Florian
Vehlow, Corinna
Heinrich, Julian
Nieselt, Kay
Sakai, Ryo
Aerts, Jan
Ray, William C
author_sort Bartlett, Christopher W
collection PubMed
description In 2011, the IEEE VisWeek conferences inaugurated a symposium on Biological Data Visualization. Like other domain-oriented Vis symposia, this symposium's purpose was to explore the unique characteristics and requirements of visualization within the domain, and to enhance both the Visualization and Bio/Life-Sciences communities by pushing Biological data sets and domain understanding into the Visualization community, and well-informed Visualization solutions back to the Biological community. Amongst several other activities, the BioVis symposium created a data analysis and visualization contest. Unlike many contests in other venues, where the purpose is primarily to allow entrants to demonstrate tour-de-force programming skills on sample problems with known solutions, the BioVis contest was intended to whet the participants' appetites for a tremendously challenging biological domain, and simultaneously produce viable tools for a biological grand challenge domain with no extant solutions. For this purpose expression Quantitative Trait Locus (eQTL) data analysis was selected. In the BioVis 2011 contest, we provided contestants with a synthetic eQTL data set containing real biological variation, as well as a spiked-in gene expression interaction network influenced by single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) DNA variation and a hypothetical disease model. Contestants were asked to elucidate the pattern of SNPs and interactions that predicted an individual's disease state. 9 teams competed in the contest using a mixture of methods, some analytical and others through visual exploratory methods. Independent panels of visualization and biological experts judged entries. Awards were given for each panel's favorite entry, and an overall best entry agreed upon by both panels. Three special mention awards were given for particularly innovative and useful aspects of those entries. And further recognition was given to entries that correctly answered a bonus question about how a proposed "gene therapy" change to a SNP might change an individual's disease status, which served as a calibration for each approaches' applicability to a typical domain question. In the future, BioVis will continue the data analysis and visualization contest, maintaining the philosophy of providing new challenging questions in open-ended and dramatically underserved Bio/Life Sciences domains.
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spelling pubmed-33553342012-05-18 An eQTL biological data visualization challenge and approaches from the visualization community Bartlett, Christopher W Yeon Cheong, Soo Hou, Liping Paquette, Jesse Yee Lum, Pek Jäger, Günter Battke, Florian Vehlow, Corinna Heinrich, Julian Nieselt, Kay Sakai, Ryo Aerts, Jan Ray, William C BMC Bioinformatics Research In 2011, the IEEE VisWeek conferences inaugurated a symposium on Biological Data Visualization. Like other domain-oriented Vis symposia, this symposium's purpose was to explore the unique characteristics and requirements of visualization within the domain, and to enhance both the Visualization and Bio/Life-Sciences communities by pushing Biological data sets and domain understanding into the Visualization community, and well-informed Visualization solutions back to the Biological community. Amongst several other activities, the BioVis symposium created a data analysis and visualization contest. Unlike many contests in other venues, where the purpose is primarily to allow entrants to demonstrate tour-de-force programming skills on sample problems with known solutions, the BioVis contest was intended to whet the participants' appetites for a tremendously challenging biological domain, and simultaneously produce viable tools for a biological grand challenge domain with no extant solutions. For this purpose expression Quantitative Trait Locus (eQTL) data analysis was selected. In the BioVis 2011 contest, we provided contestants with a synthetic eQTL data set containing real biological variation, as well as a spiked-in gene expression interaction network influenced by single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) DNA variation and a hypothetical disease model. Contestants were asked to elucidate the pattern of SNPs and interactions that predicted an individual's disease state. 9 teams competed in the contest using a mixture of methods, some analytical and others through visual exploratory methods. Independent panels of visualization and biological experts judged entries. Awards were given for each panel's favorite entry, and an overall best entry agreed upon by both panels. Three special mention awards were given for particularly innovative and useful aspects of those entries. And further recognition was given to entries that correctly answered a bonus question about how a proposed "gene therapy" change to a SNP might change an individual's disease status, which served as a calibration for each approaches' applicability to a typical domain question. In the future, BioVis will continue the data analysis and visualization contest, maintaining the philosophy of providing new challenging questions in open-ended and dramatically underserved Bio/Life Sciences domains. BioMed Central 2012-05-18 /pmc/articles/PMC3355334/ /pubmed/22607587 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2105-13-S8-S8 Text en Copyright ©2012 Bartlett et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research
Bartlett, Christopher W
Yeon Cheong, Soo
Hou, Liping
Paquette, Jesse
Yee Lum, Pek
Jäger, Günter
Battke, Florian
Vehlow, Corinna
Heinrich, Julian
Nieselt, Kay
Sakai, Ryo
Aerts, Jan
Ray, William C
An eQTL biological data visualization challenge and approaches from the visualization community
title An eQTL biological data visualization challenge and approaches from the visualization community
title_full An eQTL biological data visualization challenge and approaches from the visualization community
title_fullStr An eQTL biological data visualization challenge and approaches from the visualization community
title_full_unstemmed An eQTL biological data visualization challenge and approaches from the visualization community
title_short An eQTL biological data visualization challenge and approaches from the visualization community
title_sort eqtl biological data visualization challenge and approaches from the visualization community
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3355334/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22607587
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2105-13-S8-S8
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