cg

changeset 96:3dd9a1a81c23

.
author bshanks@bshanks.dyndns.org
date Wed Apr 22 05:26:06 2009 -0700 (16 years ago)
parents a25a60a4bf43
children 1849a5bd1ce9
files grant.bib grant.html grant.odt grant.pdf grant.txt nih-blank.cls
line diff
1.1 --- a/grant.bib Tue Apr 21 18:53:40 2009 -0700 1.2 +++ b/grant.bib Wed Apr 22 05:26:06 2009 -0700 1.3 @@ -73,7 +73,7 @@ 1.4 publisher = {{ACM}}, 1.5 author = {Bayle Shanks}, 1.6 year = {2005}, 1.7 - keywords = {atom,client-side wiki,interoperability,interwiki,middleware,webdav,wiki,wiki xmlrpc,wikiclient,wikigateway,wikirpcinterface}, 1.8 + keywords = {atom,client-side wiki,interoperability,interwiki,middleware,webdav,wiki,wikiclient,wikigateway,wikirpcinterface,wiki xmlrpc}, 1.9 pages = {53--66} 1.10 }, 1.11 1.12 @@ -218,7 +218,7 @@ 1.13 booktitle = {Computational Systems Bioinformatics Conference, 2005. Workshops and Poster Abstracts. {IEEE}}, 1.14 author = {J. Carson and T. Ju and C. Thaller and M. Bello and I. Kakadiaris and J. Warren and G. Eichele and W. Chiu}, 1.15 year = {2005}, 1.16 - keywords = {atlas-based segmentation,automate robotic in situ hybridization image annotation,biological techniques,biological tissues,biology {computing,Brain,cell} differentiation,cell-cell signaling,cellular biophysics,cellular resolution,cluster analysis,data {mining,DNA} sequence database,functional genomics,gene expression pattern,genetics,image classification,image segmentation,mesh maps,pattern clustering,postnatal mouse brain,query interface,statistical analysis,tissue}, 1.17 + keywords = {atlas-based segmentation,automate robotic in situ hybridization image annotation,biological techniques,biological tissues,biology {computing,Brain,cell-cell} signaling,cell differentiation,cellular biophysics,cellular resolution,cluster analysis,data {mining,DNA} sequence database,functional genomics,gene expression pattern,genetics,image classification,image segmentation,mesh maps,pattern clustering,postnatal mouse brain,query interface,statistical analysis,tissue}, 1.18 pages = {358} 1.19 }, 1.20 1.21 @@ -501,4 +501,30 @@ 1.22 author = {Trevor Hastie and Robert Tibshirani and Michael Eisen and Ash Alizadeh and Ronald Levy and Louis Staudt and Wing Chan and David Botstein and Patrick Brown}, 1.23 year = {2000}, 1.24 pages = {research0003.1--research0003.21} 1.25 +}, 1.26 + 1.27 +@misc{_home_????, 1.28 + title = {Home Page of Geoffrey Hinton}, 1.29 + url = {http://www.cs.toronto.edu/~hinton/}, 1.30 + howpublished = {http://www.cs.toronto.edu/{\textasciitilde}hinton/}, 1.31 + comment = {eep Boltzmann Machines.} 1.32 +}, 1.33 + 1.34 +@misc{_dbm.pdf_????, 1.35 + title = {dbm.pdf}, 1.36 + url = {http://www.cs.toronto.edu/~hinton/absps/dbm.pdf} 1.37 +}, 1.38 + 1.39 +@misc{_dbm.pdf_????-1, 1.40 + title = {dbm.pdf}, 1.41 + url = {http://www.cs.toronto.edu/~hinton/absps/dbm.pdf} 1.42 +}, 1.43 + 1.44 +@inproceedings{kemp_learning_2006, 1.45 + title = {Learning systems of concepts with an infinite relational model.}, 1.46 + url = {http://web.mit.edu/cocosci/josh.html}, 1.47 + booktitle = {{AAAI}}, 1.48 + author = {C Kemp and {JB} Tenenbaum and {TL} Griffiths and T Yamada and N Ueda}, 1.49 + year = {2006}, 1.50 + keywords = {infinite,model,relational} 1.51 } 1.52 \ No newline at end of file
2.1 --- a/grant.html Tue Apr 21 18:53:40 2009 -0700 2.2 +++ b/grant.html Wed Apr 22 05:26:06 2009 -0700 2.3 @@ -1,834 +1,938 @@ 2.4 Specific aims 2.5 -Massivenew datasets obtained with techniques such as in situ hybridization (ISH), immunohistochemistry, in situ transgenic 2.6 -reporter, microarray voxelation, and others, allow the expression levels of many genes at many locations to be compared. 2.7 -Our goal is to develop automated methods to relate spatial variation in gene expression to anatomy. We want to find marker 2.8 -genes for specific anatomical regions, and also to draw new anatomical maps based on gene expression patterns. We have 2.9 -three specific aims: 2.10 -(1) develop an algorithm to screen spatial gene expression data for combinations of marker genes which selectively target 2.11 -anatomical regions 2.12 -(2) develop an algorithm to suggest new ways of carving up a structure into anatomically distinct regions, based on 2.13 -spatial patterns in gene expression 2.14 -(3) create a 2-D &#8220;flat map&#8221; dataset of the mouse cerebral cortex that contains a flattened version of the Allen Mouse 2.15 -Brain Atlas ISH data, as well as the boundaries of cortical anatomical areas. This will involve extending the functionality of 2.16 -Caret, an existing open-source scientific imaging program. Use this dataset to validate the methods developed in (1) and (2). 2.17 -Although our particular application involves the 3D spatial distribution of gene expression, we anticipate that the methods 2.18 -developed in aims (1) and (2) will generalize to any sort of high-dimensional data over points located in a low-dimensional 2.19 -space. In particular, our method could be applied to genome-wide sequencing data derived from sets of tissues and disease 2.20 -states. 2.21 -In terms of the application of the methods to cerebral cortex, aim (1) is to go from cortical areas to marker genes, 2.22 -and aim (2) is to let the gene profile define the cortical areas. In addition to validating the usefulness of the algorithms, 2.23 -the application of these methods to cortex will produce immediate benefits, because there are currently no known genetic 2.24 -markers for most cortical areas. The results of the project will support the development of new ways to selectively target 2.25 -cortical areas, and it will support the development of a method for identifying the cortical areal boundaries present in small 2.26 -tissue samples. 2.27 -All algorithms that we develop will be implemented in a GPL open-source software toolkit. The toolkit, as well as the 2.28 -machine-readable datasets developed in aim (3), will be published and freely available for others to use. 2.29 +Massive new datasets obtained with techniques such as in situ hybridization (ISH), immunohistochemistry, in 2.30 +situ transgenic reporter, microarray voxelation, and others, allow the expression levels of many genes at many 2.31 +locations to be compared. Our goal is to develop automated methods to relate spatial variation in gene expres- 2.32 +sion to anatomy. We want to find marker genes for specific anatomical regions, and also to draw new anatomical 2.33 +maps based on gene expression patterns. We have three specific aims: 2.34 +(1) develop an algorithm to screen spatial gene expression data for combinations of marker genes which 2.35 +selectively target anatomical regions 2.36 +(2) develop an algorithm to suggest new ways of carving up a structure into anatomically distinct regions, 2.37 +based on spatial patterns in gene expression 2.38 +(3) create a 2-D &#8220;flat map&#8221; dataset of the mouse cerebral cortex that contains a flattened version of the Allen 2.39 +Mouse Brain Atlas ISH data, as well as the boundaries of cortical anatomical areas. This will involve extending 2.40 +the functionality of Caret, an existing open-source scientific imaging program. Use this dataset to validate the 2.41 +methods developed in (1) and (2). 2.42 +Although our particular application involves the 3D spatial distribution of gene expression, we anticipate that 2.43 +the methods developed in aims (1) and (2) will generalize to any sort of high-dimensional data over points located 2.44 +in a low-dimensional space. In particular, our method could be applied to genome-wide sequencing data derived 2.45 +from sets of tissues and disease states. 2.46 +In terms of the application of the methods to cerebral cortex, aim (1) is to go from cortical areas to marker 2.47 +genes, and aim (2) is to let the gene profile define the cortical areas. In addition to validating the usefulness 2.48 +of the algorithms, the application of these methods to cortex will produce immediate benefits, because there 2.49 +are currently no known genetic markers for most cortical areas. The results of the project will support the 2.50 +development of new ways to selectively target cortical areas, and it will support the development of a method for 2.51 +identifying the cortical areal boundaries present in small tissue samples. 2.52 +All algorithms that we develop will be implemented in a GPL open-source software toolkit. The toolkit, as well 2.53 +as the machine-readable datasets developed in aim (3), will be published and freely available for others to use. 2.54 The challenge topic 2.55 -This proposal addresses challenge topic 06-HG-101. Massive new datasets obtained with techniques such as in situ hybridiza- 2.56 -tion (ISH), immunohistochemistry, in situ transgenic reporter, microarray voxelation, and others, allow the expression levels 2.57 -of many genes at many locations to be compared. Our goal is to develop automated methods to relate spatial variation in 2.58 -gene expression to anatomy. We want to find marker genes for specific anatomical regions, and also to draw new anatomical 2.59 -maps based on gene expression patterns. 2.60 +This proposal addresses challenge topic 06-HG-101. Massive new datasets obtained with techniques such as 2.61 +in situ hybridization (ISH), immunohistochemistry, in situ transgenic reporter, microarray voxelation, and others, 2.62 +allow the expression levels of many genes at many locations to be compared. Our goal is to develop automated 2.63 +methods to relate spatial variation in gene expression to anatomy. We want to find marker genes for specific 2.64 +anatomical regions, and also to draw new anatomical maps based on gene expression patterns. 2.65 The Challenge and Potential impact 2.66 -Each of our three aims will be discussed in turn. For each aim, we will develop a conceptual framework for thinking about 2.67 -the task, and we will present our strategy for solving it. Next we will discuss related work. At the conclusion of each section, 2.68 -we will summarize why our strategy is different from what has been done before. At the end of this section, we will describe 2.69 -the potential impact. 2.70 +Each of our three aims will be discussed in turn. For each aim, we will develop a conceptual framework for 2.71 +thinking about the task, and we will present our strategy for solving it. Next we will discuss related work. At the 2.72 +conclusion of each section, we will summarize why our strategy is different from what has been done before. At 2.73 +the end of this section, we will describe the potential impact. 2.74 Aim 1: Given a map of regions, find genes that mark the regions 2.75 -Machine learning terminology: classifiers The task of looking for marker genes for known anatomical regions means 2.76 -that one is looking for a set of genes such that, if the expression level of those genes is known, then the locations of the 2.77 -regions can be inferred. 2.78 -If we define the regions so that they cover the entire anatomical structure to be subdivided, we may say that we are 2.79 -using gene expression in each voxel to assign that voxel to the proper area. We call this a classification task, because each 2.80 -voxel is being assigned to a class (namely, its region). An understanding of the relationship between the combination of 2.81 -their expression levels and the locations of the regions may be expressed as a function. The input to this function is a voxel, 2.82 -along with the gene expression levels within that voxel; the output is the regional identity of the target voxel, that is, the 2.83 -region to which the target voxel belongs. We call this function a classifier. In general, the input to a classifier is called an 2.84 -instance, and the output is called a label (or a class label). 2.85 -The object of aim 1 is not to produce a single classifier, but rather to develop an automated method for determining a 2.86 -classifier for any known anatomical structure. Therefore, we seek a procedure by which a gene expression dataset may be 2.87 -analyzed in concert with an anatomical atlas in order to produce a classifier. The initial gene expression dataset used in 2.88 -the construction of the classifier is called training data. In the machine learning literature, this sort of procedure may be 2.89 -thought of as a supervised learning task, defined as a task in which the goal is to learn a mapping from instances to labels, 2.90 -and the training data consists of a set of instances (voxels) for which the labels (regions) are known. 2.91 -Each gene expression level is called a feature, and the selection of which genes1 to include is called feature selection. 2.92 -Feature selection is one component of the task of learning a classifier. Some methods for learning classifiers start out with 2.93 -a separate feature selection phase, whereas other methods combine feature selection with other aspects of training. 2.94 -One class of feature selection methods assigns some sort of score to each candidate gene. The top-ranked genes are then 2.95 -chosen. Some scoring measures can assign a score to a set of selected genes, not just to a single gene; in this case, a dynamic 2.96 -procedure may be used in which features are added and subtracted from the selected set depending on how much they raise 2.97 -the score. Such procedures are called &#8220;stepwise&#8221; or &#8220;greedy&#8221;. 2.98 -Although the classifier itself may only look at the gene expression data within each voxel before classifying that voxel, the 2.99 -algorithm which constructs the classifier may look over the entire dataset. We can categorize score-based feature selection 2.100 -methods depending on how the score of calculated. Often the score calculation consists of assigning a sub-score to each voxel, 2.101 -and then aggregating these sub-scores into a final score (the aggregation is often a sum or a sum of squares or average). If 2.102 -only information from nearby voxels is used to calculate a voxel&#8217;s sub-score, then we say it is a local scoring method. If only 2.103 -information from the voxel itself is used to calculate a voxel&#8217;s sub-score, then we say it is a pointwise scoring method. 2.104 -Both gene expression data and anatomical atlases have errors, due to a variety of factors. Individual subjects have 2.105 -idiosyncratic anatomy. Subjects may be improperly registred to the atlas. The method used to measure gene expression 2.106 -may be noisy. The atlas may have errors. It is even possible that some areas in the anatomical atlas are &#8220;wrong&#8221; in that 2.107 -they do not have the same shape as the natural domains of gene expression to which they correspond. These sources of error 2.108 -can affect the displacement and the shape of both the gene expression data and the anatomical target areas. Therefore, it 2.109 -is important to use feature selection methods which are robust to these kinds of errors. 2.110 +Machine learning terminology: classifiers The task of looking for marker genes for known anatomical regions 2.111 +means that one is looking for a set of genes such that, if the expression level of those genes is known, then the 2.112 +locations of the regions can be inferred. 2.113 +If we define the regions so that they cover the entire anatomical structure to be subdivided, we may say that 2.114 +we are using gene expression in each voxel to assign that voxel to the proper area. We call this a classification 2.115 +task, because each voxel is being assigned to a class (namely, its region). An understanding of the relationship 2.116 +between the combination of their expression levels and the locations of the regions may be expressed as a 2.117 +function. The input to this function is a voxel, along with the gene expression levels within that voxel; the output is 2.118 +the regional identity of the target voxel, that is, the region to which the target voxel belongs. We call this function 2.119 +a classifier. In general, the input to a classifier is called an instance, and the output is called a label (or a class 2.120 +label). 2.121 +The object of aim 1 is not to produce a single classifier, but rather to develop an automated method for 2.122 +determining a classifier for any known anatomical structure. Therefore, we seek a procedure by which a gene 2.123 +expression dataset may be analyzed in concert with an anatomical atlas in order to produce a classifier. The 2.124 +initial gene expression dataset used in the construction of the classifier is called training data. In the machine 2.125 +learning literature, this sort of procedure may be thought of as a supervised learning task, defined as a task in 2.126 +which the goal is to learn a mapping from instances to labels, and the training data consists of a set of instances 2.127 +(voxels) for which the labels (regions) are known. 2.128 +Each gene expression level is called a feature, and the selection of which genes1 to include is called feature 2.129 +selection. Feature selection is one component of the task of learning a classifier. Some methods for learning 2.130 +classifiers start out with a separate feature selection phase, whereas other methods combine feature selection 2.131 +with other aspects of training. 2.132 +One class of feature selection methods assigns some sort of score to each candidate gene. The top-ranked 2.133 +genes are then chosen. Some scoring measures can assign a score to a set of selected genes, not just to a 2.134 +single gene; in this case, a dynamic procedure may be used in which features are added and subtracted from the 2.135 +selected set depending on how much they raise the score. Such procedures are called &#8220;stepwise&#8221; or &#8220;greedy&#8221;. 2.136 +Although the classifier itself may only look at the gene expression data within each voxel before classifying 2.137 +that voxel, the algorithm which constructs the classifier may look over the entire dataset. We can categorize 2.138 +score-based feature selection methods depending on how the score of calculated. Often the score calculation 2.139 +consists of assigning a sub-score to each voxel, and then aggregating these sub-scores into a final score (the 2.140 +aggregation is often a sum or a sum of squares or average). If only information from nearby voxels is used to 2.141 +calculate a voxel&#8217;s sub-score, then we say it is a local scoring method. If only information from the voxel itself is 2.142 +used to calculate a voxel&#8217;s sub-score, then we say it is a pointwise scoring method. 2.143 +_________________________________________ 2.144 + 1Strictly speaking, the features are gene expression levels, but we&#8217;ll call them genes. 2.145 +Both gene expression data and anatomical atlases have errors, due to a variety of factors. Individual subjects 2.146 +have idiosyncratic anatomy. Subjects may be improperly registred to the atlas. The method used to measure 2.147 +gene expression may be noisy. The atlas may have errors. It is even possible that some areas in the anatomical 2.148 +atlas are &#8220;wrong&#8221; in that they do not have the same shape as the natural domains of gene expression to which 2.149 +they correspond. These sources of error can affect the displacement and the shape of both the gene expression 2.150 +data and the anatomical target areas. Therefore, it is important to use feature selection methods which are 2.151 +robust to these kinds of errors. 2.152 Our strategy for Aim 1 2.153 -Key questions when choosing a learning method are: What are the instances? What are the features? How are the features 2.154 -chosen? Here are four principles that outline our answers to these questions. 2.155 -_________________________________________ 2.156 - 1Strictly speaking, the features are gene expression levels, but we&#8217;ll call them genes. 2.157 +Key questions when choosing a learning method are: What are the instances? What are the features? How are 2.158 +the features chosen? Here are four principles that outline our answers to these questions. 2.159 Principle 1: Combinatorial gene expression 2.160 -It istoo much to hope that every anatomical region of interest will be identified by a single gene. For example, in the 2.161 -cortex, there are some areas which are not clearly delineated by any gene included in the Allen Brain Atlas (ABA) dataset. 2.162 -However, at least some of these areas can be delineated by looking at combinations of genes (an example of an area for 2.163 -which multiple genes are necessary and sufficient is provided in Preliminary Studies, Figure 4). Therefore, each instance 2.164 -should contain multiple features (genes). 2.165 +It is too much to hope that every anatomical region of interest will be identified by a single gene. For example, 2.166 +in the cortex, there are some areas which are not clearly delineated by any gene included in the Allen Brain Atlas 2.167 +(ABA) dataset. However, at least some of these areas can be delineated by looking at combinations of genes 2.168 +(an example of an area for which multiple genes are necessary and sufficient is provided in Preliminary Studies, 2.169 +Figure 4). Therefore, each instance should contain multiple features (genes). 2.170 Principle 2: Only look at combinations of small numbers of genes 2.171 -When the classifier classifies a voxel, it is only allowed to look at the expression of the genes which have been selected 2.172 -as features. The more data that are available to a classifier, the better that it can do. For example, perhaps there are weak 2.173 -correlations over many genes that add up to a strong signal. So, why not include every gene as a feature? The reason is that 2.174 -we wish to employ the classifier in situations in which it is not feasible to gather data about every gene. For example, if we 2.175 -want to use the expression of marker genes as a trigger for some regionally-targeted intervention, then our intervention must 2.176 -contain a molecular mechanism to check the expression level of each marker gene before it triggers. It is currently infeasible 2.177 -to design a molecular trigger that checks the level of more than a handful of genes. Similarly, if the goal is to develop a 2.178 -procedure to do ISH on tissue samples in order to label their anatomy, then it is infeasible to label more than a few genes. 2.179 -Therefore, we must select only a few genes as features. 2.180 -The requirement to find combinations of only a small number of genes limits us from straightforwardly applying many 2.181 -of the most simple techniques from the field of supervised machine learning. In the parlance of machine learning, our task 2.182 -combines feature selection with supervised learning. 2.183 +When the classifier classifies a voxel, it is only allowed to look at the expression of the genes which have 2.184 +been selected as features. The more data that are available to a classifier, the better that it can do. For example, 2.185 +perhaps there are weak correlations over many genes that add up to a strong signal. So, why not include every 2.186 +gene as a feature? The reason is that we wish to employ the classifier in situations in which it is not feasible to 2.187 +gather data about every gene. For example, if we want to use the expression of marker genes as a trigger for 2.188 +some regionally-targeted intervention, then our intervention must contain a molecular mechanism to check the 2.189 +expression level of each marker gene before it triggers. It is currently infeasible to design a molecular trigger that 2.190 +checks the level of more than a handful of genes. Similarly, if the goal is to develop a procedure to do ISH on 2.191 +tissue samples in order to label their anatomy, then it is infeasible to label more than a few genes. Therefore, we 2.192 +must select only a few genes as features. 2.193 +The requirement to find combinations of only a small number of genes limits us from straightforwardly ap- 2.194 +plying many of the most simple techniques from the field of supervised machine learning. In the parlance of 2.195 +machine learning, our task combines feature selection with supervised learning. 2.196 Principle 3: Use geometry in feature selection 2.197 -When doing feature selection with score-based methods, the simplest thing to do would be to score the performance of 2.198 -each voxel by itself and then combine these scores (pointwise scoring). A more powerful approach is to also use information 2.199 -about the geometric relations between each voxel and its neighbors; this requires non-pointwise, local scoring methods. See 2.200 -Preliminary Studies, figure 3 for evidence of the complementary nature of pointwise and local scoring methods. 2.201 +When doing feature selection with score-based methods, the simplest thing to do would be to score the per- 2.202 +formance of each voxel by itself and then combine these scores (pointwise scoring). A more powerful approach 2.203 +is to also use information about the geometric relations between each voxel and its neighbors; this requires non- 2.204 +pointwise, local scoring methods. See Preliminary Studies, figure 3 for evidence of the complementary nature of 2.205 +pointwise and local scoring methods. 2.206 Principle 4: Work in 2-D whenever possible 2.207 -There are many anatomical structures which are commonly characterized in terms of a two-dimensional manifold. When 2.208 -it is known that the structure that one is looking for is two-dimensional, the results may be improved by allowing the analysis 2.209 -algorithm to take advantage of this prior knowledge. In addition, it is easier for humans to visualize and work with 2-D 2.210 -data. Therefore, when possible, the instances should represent pixels, not voxels. 2.211 +There are many anatomical structures which are commonly characterized in terms of a two-dimensional 2.212 +manifold. When it is known that the structure that one is looking for is two-dimensional, the results may be 2.213 +improved by allowing the analysis algorithm to take advantage of this prior knowledge. In addition, it is easier for 2.214 +humans to visualize and work with 2-D data. Therefore, when possible, the instances should represent pixels, 2.215 +not voxels. 2.216 Related work 2.217 -There is a substantial body of work on the analysis of gene expression data, most of this concerns gene expression data 2.218 -which are not fundamentally spatial2. 2.219 -As noted above, there has been much work on both supervised learning and there are many available algorithms for 2.220 -each. However, the algorithms require the scientist to provide a framework for representing the problem domain, and the 2.221 -way that this framework is set up has a large impact on performance. Creating a good framework can require creatively 2.222 -reconceptualizing the problem domain, and is not merely a mechanical &#8220;fine-tuning&#8221; of numerical parameters. For example, 2.223 -we believe that domain-specific scoring measures (such as gradient similarity, which is discussed in Preliminary Studies) may 2.224 -be necessary in order to achieve the best results in this application. 2.225 -We are aware of six existing efforts to find marker genes using spatial gene expression data using automated methods. 2.226 -[12 ] mentions the possibility of constructing a spatial region for each gene, and then, for each anatomical structure of 2.227 -interest, computing what proportion of this structure is covered by the gene&#8217;s spatial region. 2.228 -GeneAtlas[5] and EMAGE [25] allow the user to construct a search query by demarcating regions and then specifing 2.229 -either the strength of expression or the name of another gene or dataset whose expression pattern is to be matched. For the 2.230 -similiarity score (match score) between two images (in this case, the query and the gene expression images), GeneAtlas uses 2.231 -the sum of a weighted L1-norm distance between vectors whose components represent the number of cells within a pixel3 2.232 -whose expression is within four discretization levels. EMAGE uses Jaccard similarity4. Neither GeneAtlas nor EMAGE 2.233 -allow one to search for combinations of genes that define a region in concert but not separately. 2.234 -[14 ] describes AGEA, &#8221;Anatomic Gene Expression Atlas&#8221;. AGEA has three components. Gene Finder: The user 2.235 -selects a seed voxel and the system (1) chooses a cluster which includes the seed voxel, (2) yields a list of genes which are 2.236 -overexpressed in that cluster. (note: the ABA website also contains pre-prepared lists of overexpressed genes for selected 2.237 -structures). Correlation: The user selects a seed voxel and the system then shows the user how much correlation there is 2.238 -between the gene expression profile of the seed voxel and every other voxel. Clusters: will be described later 2.239 -_________________________________________ 2.240 - 2By &#8220;fundamentally spatial&#8221; we mean that there is information from a large number of spatial locations indexed by spatial coordinates; not 2.241 -just data which have only a few different locations or which is indexed by anatomical label. 2.242 - 3Actually, many of these projects use quadrilaterals instead of square pixels; but we will refer to them as pixels for simplicity. 2.243 - 4the number of true pixels in the intersection of the two images, divided by the number of pixels in their union. 2.244 -Gene Finder is different from our Aim 1 in at least three ways. First, Gene Finder finds only single genes, whereas we 2.245 -will also look for combinations of genes. Second, gene finder can only use overexpression as a marker, whereas we will also 2.246 -search for underexpression. Third, Gene Finder uses a simple pointwise score5, whereas we will also use geometric scores 2.247 -such as gradient similarity (described in Preliminary Studies). Figures 4, 2, and 3 in the Preliminary Studies section contains 2.248 -evidence that each of our three choices is the right one. 2.249 -[6 ] looks at the mean expression level of genes within anatomical regions, and applies a Student&#8217;s t-test with Bonferroni 2.250 -correction to determine whether the mean expression level of a gene is significantly higher in the target region. Like AGEA, 2.251 -this is a pointwise measure (only the mean expression level per pixel is being analyzed), it is not being used to look for 2.252 -underexpression, and does not look for combinations of genes. 2.253 -[10 ] describes a technique to find combinations of marker genes to pick out an anatomical region. They use an evolutionary 2.254 -algorithm to evolve logical operators which combine boolean (thresholded) images in order to match a target image. Their 2.255 -match score is Jaccard similarity. 2.256 -In summary, there has been fruitful work on finding marker genes, but only one of the previous projects explores 2.257 -combinations of marker genes, and none of these publications compare the results obtained by using different algorithms or 2.258 -scoring methods. 2.259 +There is a substantial body of work on the analysis of gene expression data, most of this concerns gene expres- 2.260 +sion data which are not fundamentally spatial2. 2.261 +As noted above, there has been much work on both supervised learning and there are many available 2.262 +algorithms for each. However, the algorithms require the scientist to provide a framework for representing the 2.263 +problem domain, and the way that this framework is set up has a large impact on performance. Creating a 2.264 +good framework can require creatively reconceptualizing the problem domain, and is not merely a mechanical 2.265 +&#8220;fine-tuning&#8221; of numerical parameters. For example, we believe that domain-specific scoring measures (such 2.266 +as gradient similarity, which is discussed in Preliminary Studies) may be necessary in order to achieve the best 2.267 +results in this application. 2.268 +We are aware of six existing efforts to find marker genes using spatial gene expression data using automated 2.269 +methods. 2.270 +[13 ] mentions the possibility of constructing a spatial region for each gene, and then, for each anatomical 2.271 +structure of interest, computing what proportion of this structure is covered by the gene&#8217;s spatial region. 2.272 +GeneAtlas[5] and EMAGE [26] allow the user to construct a search query by demarcating regions and then 2.273 +specifing either the strength of expression or the name of another gene or dataset whose expression pattern 2.274 +is to be matched. For the similiarity score (match score) between two images (in this case, the query and the 2.275 +gene expression images), GeneAtlas uses the sum of a weighted L1-norm distance between vectors whose 2.276 +components represent the number of cells within a pixel3 whose expression is within four discretization levels. 2.277 +EMAGE uses Jaccard similarity4. Neither GeneAtlas nor EMAGE allow one to search for combinations of genes 2.278 +that define a region in concert but not separately. 2.279 +[15 ] describes AGEA, &#8221;Anatomic Gene Expression Atlas&#8221;. AGEA has three components. Gene Finder: The 2.280 +user selects a seed voxel and the system (1) chooses a cluster which includes the seed voxel, (2) yields a list 2.281 +of genes which are overexpressed in that cluster. (note: the ABA website also contains pre-prepared lists of 2.282 +overexpressed genes for selected structures). Correlation: The user selects a seed voxel and the system then 2.283 +shows the user how much correlation there is between the gene expression profile of the seed voxel and every 2.284 +other voxel. Clusters: will be described later 2.285 +Gene Finder is different from our Aim 1 in at least three ways. First, Gene Finder finds only single genes, 2.286 +whereas we will also look for combinations of genes. Second, gene finder can only use overexpression as a 2.287 +marker, whereas we will also search for underexpression. Third, Gene Finder uses a simple pointwise score5, 2.288 +whereas we will also use geometric scores such as gradient similarity (described in Preliminary Studies). Figures 2.289 +4, 2, and 3 in the Preliminary Studies section contains evidence that each of our three choices is the right one. 2.290 +[6 ] looks at the mean expression level of genes within anatomical regions, and applies a Student&#8217;s t-test 2.291 +with Bonferroni correction to determine whether the mean expression level of a gene is significantly higher in 2.292 +the target region. Like AGEA, this is a pointwise measure (only the mean expression level per pixel is being 2.293 +analyzed), it is not being used to look for underexpression, and does not look for combinations of genes. 2.294 +[10 ] describes a technique to find combinations of marker genes to pick out an anatomical region. They use 2.295 +an evolutionary algorithm to evolve logical operators which combine boolean (thresholded) images in order to 2.296 +match a target image. Their match score is Jaccard similarity. 2.297 +In summary, there has been fruitful work on finding marker genes, but only one of the previous projects 2.298 +explores combinations of marker genes, and none of these publications compare the results obtained by using 2.299 +different algorithms or scoring methods. 2.300 Aim 2: From gene expression data, discover a map of regions 2.301 Machine learning terminology: clustering 2.302 -If one is given a dataset consisting merely of instances, with no class labels, then analysis of the dataset is referred to as 2.303 -unsupervised learning in the jargon of machine learning. One thing that you can do with such a dataset is to group instances 2.304 -together. A set of similar instances is called a cluster, and the activity of finding grouping the data into clusters is called 2.305 -clustering or cluster analysis. 2.306 -The task of deciding how to carve up a structure into anatomical regions can be put into these terms. The instances 2.307 -are once again voxels (or pixels) along with their associated gene expression profiles. We make the assumption that voxels 2.308 -from the same anatomical region have similar gene expression profiles, at least compared to the other regions. This means 2.309 -that clustering voxels is the same as finding potential regions; we seek a partitioning of the voxels into regions, that is, into 2.310 -clusters of voxels with similar gene expression. 2.311 -It is desirable to determine not just one set of regions, but also how these regions relate to each other. The outcome of 2.312 -clustering may be a hierarchial tree of clusters, rather than a single set of clusters which partition the voxels. This is called 2.313 -hierarchial clustering. 2.314 -Similarity scores A crucial choice when designing a clustering method is how to measure similarity, across either pairs 2.315 -of instances, or clusters, or both. There is much overlap between scoring methods for feature selection (discussed above 2.316 -under Aim 1) and scoring methods for similarity. 2.317 -Spatially contiguous clusters; image segmentation We have shown that aim 2 is a type of clustering task. In fact, 2.318 -it is a special type of clustering task because we have an additional constraint on clusters; voxels grouped together into a 2.319 -cluster must be spatially contiguous. In Preliminary Studies, we show that one can get reasonable results without enforcing 2.320 -this constraint; however, we plan to compare these results against other methods which guarantee contiguous clusters. 2.321 -Image segmentation is the task of partitioning the pixels in a digital image into clusters, usually contiguous clusters. Aim 2.322 -2 is similar to an image segmentation task. There are two main differences; in our task, there are thousands of color channels 2.323 -(one for each gene), rather than just three6. A more crucial difference is that there are various cues which are appropriate 2.324 -for detecting sharp object boundaries in a visual scene but which are not appropriate for segmenting abstract spatial data 2.325 -such as gene expression. Although many image segmentation algorithms can be expected to work well for segmenting other 2.326 -sorts of spatially arranged data, some of these algorithms are specialized for visual images. 2.327 -Dimensionality reduction In this section, we discuss reducing the length of the per-pixel gene expression feature 2.328 -vector. By &#8220;dimension&#8221;, we mean the dimension of this vector, not the spatial dimension of the underlying data. 2.329 -Unlike aim 1, there is no externally-imposed need to select only a handful of informative genes for inclusion in the 2.330 -instances. However, some clustering algorithms perform better on small numbers of features7. There are techniques which 2.331 -&#8220;summarize&#8221; a larger number of features using a smaller number of features; these techniques go by the name of feature 2.332 -extraction or dimensionality reduction. The small set of features that such a technique yields is called the reduced feature 2.333 -set. Note that the features in the reduced feature set do not necessarily correspond to genes; each feature in the reduced set 2.334 -may be any function of the set of gene expression levels. 2.335 +2By &#8220;fundamentally spatial&#8221; we mean that there is information from a large number of spatial locations indexed by spatial coordinates; 2.336 +not just data which have only a few different locations or which is indexed by anatomical label. 2.337 +3Actually, many of these projects use quadrilaterals instead of square pixels; but we will refer to them as pixels for simplicity. 2.338 +4the number of true pixels in the intersection of the two images, divided by the number of pixels in their union. 2.339 +5&#8220;Expression energy ratio&#8221;, which captures overexpression. 2.340 +If one is given a dataset consisting merely of instances, with no class labels, then analysis of the dataset is 2.341 +referred to as unsupervised learning in the jargon of machine learning. One thing that you can do with such a 2.342 +dataset is to group instances together. A set of similar instances is called a cluster, and the activity of finding 2.343 +grouping the data into clusters is called clustering or cluster analysis. 2.344 +The task of deciding how to carve up a structure into anatomical regions can be put into these terms. The 2.345 +instances are once again voxels (or pixels) along with their associated gene expression profiles. We make 2.346 +the assumption that voxels from the same anatomical region have similar gene expression profiles, at least 2.347 +compared to the other regions. This means that clustering voxels is the same as finding potential regions; we 2.348 +seek a partitioning of the voxels into regions, that is, into clusters of voxels with similar gene expression. 2.349 +It is desirable to determine not just one set of regions, but also how these regions relate to each other. The 2.350 +outcome of clustering may be a hierarchial tree of clusters, rather than a single set of clusters which partition the 2.351 +voxels. This is called hierarchial clustering. 2.352 +Similarity scores A crucial choice when designing a clustering method is how to measure similarity, across 2.353 +either pairs of instances, or clusters, or both. There is much overlap between scoring methods for feature 2.354 +selection (discussed above under Aim 1) and scoring methods for similarity. 2.355 +Spatially contiguous clusters; image segmentation We have shown that aim 2 is a type of clustering 2.356 +task. In fact, it is a special type of clustering task because we have an additional constraint on clusters; voxels 2.357 +grouped together into a cluster must be spatially contiguous. In Preliminary Studies, we show that one can get 2.358 +reasonable results without enforcing this constraint; however, we plan to compare these results against other 2.359 +methods which guarantee contiguous clusters. 2.360 +Image segmentation is the task of partitioning the pixels in a digital image into clusters, usually contiguous 2.361 +clusters. Aim 2 is similar to an image segmentation task. There are two main differences; in our task, there are 2.362 +thousands of color channels (one for each gene), rather than just three6. A more crucial difference is that there 2.363 +are various cues which are appropriate for detecting sharp object boundaries in a visual scene but which are not 2.364 +appropriate for segmenting abstract spatial data such as gene expression. Although many image segmentation 2.365 +algorithms can be expected to work well for segmenting other sorts of spatially arranged data, some of these 2.366 +algorithms are specialized for visual images. 2.367 +Dimensionality reduction In this section, we discuss reducing the length of the per-pixel gene expression 2.368 +feature vector. By &#8220;dimension&#8221;, we mean the dimension of this vector, not the spatial dimension of the underlying 2.369 +data. 2.370 +Unlike aim 1, there is no externally-imposed need to select only a handful of informative genes for inclusion 2.371 +in the instances. However, some clustering algorithms perform better on small numbers of features7. There are 2.372 +techniques which &#8220;summarize&#8221; a larger number of features using a smaller number of features; these techniques 2.373 +go by the name of feature extraction or dimensionality reduction. The small set of features that such a technique 2.374 +yields is called the reduced feature set. Note that the features in the reduced feature set do not necessarily 2.375 +correspond to genes; each feature in the reduced set may be any function of the set of gene expression levels. 2.376 +Clustering genes rather than voxels Although the ultimate goal is to cluster the instances (voxels or pixels), 2.377 +one strategy to achieve this goal is to first cluster the features (genes). There are two ways that clusters of genes 2.378 +could be used. 2.379 +Gene clusters could be used as part of dimensionality reduction: rather than have one feature for each gene, 2.380 +we could have one reduced feature for each gene cluster. 2.381 +Gene clusters could also be used to directly yield a clustering on instances. This is because many genes 2.382 +have an expression pattern which seems to pick out a single, spatially continguous region. Therefore, it seems 2.383 +likely that an anatomically interesting region will have multiple genes which each individually pick it out8. This 2.384 _________________________________________ 2.385 - 5&#8220;Expression energy ratio&#8221;, which captures overexpression. 2.386 - 6There are imaging tasks which use more than three colors, for example multispectral imaging and hyperspectral imaging, which are often 2.387 -used to process satellite imagery. 2.388 - 7First, because the number of features in the reduced dataset is less than in the original dataset, the running time of clustering algorithms 2.389 -may be much less. Second, it is thought that some clustering algorithms may give better results on reduced data. 2.390 -Clustering genes rather than voxels Although the ultimate goal is to cluster the instances (voxels or pixels), one 2.391 -strategy to achieve this goal is to first cluster the features (genes). There are two ways that clusters of genes could be used. 2.392 -Gene clusters could be used as part of dimensionality reduction: rather than have one feature for each gene, we could 2.393 -have one reduced feature for each gene cluster. 2.394 -Gene clusters could also be used to directly yield a clustering on instances. This is because many genes have an expression 2.395 -pattern which seems to pick out a single, spatially continguous region. Therefore, it seems likely that an anatomically 2.396 -interesting region will have multiple genes which each individually pick it out8. This suggests the following procedure: 2.397 -cluster together genes which pick out similar regions, and then to use the more popular common regions as the final clusters. 2.398 -In Preliminary Studies, Figure 7, we show that a number of anatomically recognized cortical regions, as well as some 2.399 -&#8220;superregions&#8221; formed by lumping together a few regions, are associated with gene clusters in this fashion. 2.400 -The task of clustering both the instances and the features is called co-clustering, and there are a number of co-clustering 2.401 -algorithms. 2.402 + 6There are imaging tasks which use more than three colors, for example multispectral imaging and hyperspectral imaging, which are 2.403 +often used to process satellite imagery. 2.404 + 7First, because the number of features in the reduced dataset is less than in the original dataset, the running time of clustering 2.405 +algorithms may be much less. Second, it is thought that some clustering algorithms may give better results on reduced data. 2.406 + 8This would seem to contradict our finding in aim 1 that some cortical areas are combinatorially coded by multiple genes. However, 2.407 +it is possible that the currently accepted cortical maps divide the cortex into regions which are unnatural from the point of view of gene 2.408 +expression; perhaps there is some other way to map the cortex for which each region can be identified by single genes. Another 2.409 +suggests the following procedure: cluster together genes which pick out similar regions, and then to use the 2.410 +more popular common regions as the final clusters. In Preliminary Studies, Figure 7, we show that a number 2.411 +of anatomically recognized cortical regions, as well as some &#8220;superregions&#8221; formed by lumping together a few 2.412 +regions, are associated with gene clusters in this fashion. 2.413 +The task of clustering both the instances and the features is called co-clustering, and there are a number of 2.414 +co-clustering algorithms. 2.415 Related work 2.416 -Some researchers have attempted to parcellate cortex on the basis of non-gene expression data. For example, [17], [2], [18], 2.417 -and [1 ] associate spots on the cortex with the radial profile9 of response to some stain ([11] uses MRI), extract features from 2.418 -this profile, and then use similarity between surface pixels to cluster. Features used include statistical moments, wavelets, 2.419 -and the excess mass functional. Some of these features are motivated by the presence of tangential lines of stain intensity 2.420 -which correspond to laminar structure. Some methods use standard clustering procedures, whereas others make use of the 2.421 -spatial nature of the data to look for sudden transitions, which are identified as areal borders. 2.422 -[22 ] describes an analysis of the anatomy of the hippocampus using the ABA dataset. In addition to manual analysis, 2.423 -two clustering methods were employed, a modified Non-negative Matrix Factorization (NNMF), and a hierarchial recursive 2.424 -bifurcation clustering scheme based on correlation as the similarity score. The paper yielded impressive results, proving 2.425 -the usefulness of computational genomic anatomy. We have run NNMF on the cortical dataset10 and while the results are 2.426 -promising, they also demonstrate that NNMF is not necessarily the best dimensionality reduction method for this application 2.427 -(see Preliminary Studies, Figure 6). 2.428 -AGEA[14] includes a preset hierarchial clustering of voxels based on a recursive bifurcation algorithm with correlation 2.429 -as the similarity metric. EMAGE[25] allows the user to select a dataset from among a large number of alternatives, or by 2.430 -running a search query, and then to cluster the genes within that dataset. EMAGE clusters via hierarchial complete linkage 2.431 -clustering with un-centred correlation as the similarity score. 2.432 -[6 ] clustered genes, starting out by selecting 135 genes out of 20,000 which had high variance over voxels and which were 2.433 -highly correlated with many other genes. They computed the matrix of (rank) correlations between pairs of these genes, and 2.434 -ordered the rows of this matrix as follows: &#8220;the first row of the matrix was chosen to show the strongest contrast between 2.435 -the highest and lowest correlation coefficient for that row. The remaining rows were then arranged in order of decreasing 2.436 -similarity using a least squares metric&#8221;. The resulting matrix showed four clusters. For each cluster, prototypical spatial 2.437 -expression patterns were created by averaging the genes in the cluster. The prototypes were analyzed manually, without 2.438 -clustering voxels. 2.439 -[10 ] applies their technique for finding combinations of marker genes for the purpose of clustering genes around a &#8220;seed 2.440 -gene&#8221;. They do this by using the pattern of expression of the seed gene as the target image, and then searching for other 2.441 -genes which can be combined to reproduce this pattern. Other genes which are found are considered to be related to the 2.442 -seed. The same team also describes a method[24] for finding &#8220;association rules&#8221; such as, &#8220;if this voxel is expressed in by 2.443 -any gene, then that voxel is probably also expressed in by the same gene&#8221;. This could be useful as part of a procedure for 2.444 -clustering voxels. 2.445 -In summary, although these projects obtained clusterings, there has not been much comparison between different algo- 2.446 -rithms or scoring methods, so it is likely that the best clustering method for this application has not yet been found. The 2.447 -projects using gene expression on cortex did not attempt to make use of the radial profile of gene expression. Also, none of 2.448 -these projects did a separate dimensionality reduction step before clustering pixels, none tried to cluster genes first in order 2.449 -to guide automated clustering of pixels into spatial regions, and none used co-clustering algorithms. 2.450 -_________________________________________ 2.451 - 8This would seem to contradict our finding in aim 1 that some cortical areas are combinatorially coded by multiple genes. However, it is 2.452 -possible that the currently accepted cortical maps divide the cortex into regions which are unnatural from the point of view of gene expression; 2.453 -perhaps there is some other way to map the cortex for which each region can be identified by single genes. Another possibility is that, although 2.454 -the cluster prototype fits an anatomical region, the individual genes are each somewhat different from the prototype. 2.455 - 9A radial profile is a profile along a line perpendicular to the cortical surface. 2.456 - 10We ran &#8220;vanilla&#8221; NNMF, whereas the paper under discussion used a modified method. Their main modification consisted of adding a soft 2.457 -spatial contiguity constraint. However, on our dataset, NNMF naturally produced spatially contiguous clusters, so no additional constraint was 2.458 -needed. The paper under discussion also mentions that they tried a hierarchial variant of NNMF, which we have not yet tried. 2.459 +Some researchers have attempted to parcellate cortex on the basis of non-gene expression data. For example, 2.460 +[18 ], [2 ], [19], and [1] associate spots on the cortex with the radial profile9 of response to some stain ([12] uses 2.461 +MRI), extract features from this profile, and then use similarity between surface pixels to cluster. Features used 2.462 +include statistical moments, wavelets, and the excess mass functional. Some of these features are motivated 2.463 +by the presence of tangential lines of stain intensity which correspond to laminar structure. Some methods use 2.464 +standard clustering procedures, whereas others make use of the spatial nature of the data to look for sudden 2.465 +transitions, which are identified as areal borders. 2.466 +[23 ] describes an analysis of the anatomy of the hippocampus using the ABA dataset. In addition to manual 2.467 +analysis, two clustering methods were employed, a modified Non-negative Matrix Factorization (NNMF), and 2.468 +a hierarchial recursive bifurcation clustering scheme based on correlation as the similarity score. The paper 2.469 +yielded impressive results, proving the usefulness of computational genomic anatomy. We have run NNMF on 2.470 +the cortical dataset10 and while the results are promising, they also demonstrate that NNMF is not necessarily 2.471 +the best dimensionality reduction method for this application (see Preliminary Studies, Figure 6). 2.472 +AGEA[15] includes a preset hierarchial clustering of voxels based on a recursive bifurcation algorithm with 2.473 +correlation as the similarity metric. EMAGE[26] allows the user to select a dataset from among a large number 2.474 +of alternatives, or by running a search query, and then to cluster the genes within that dataset. EMAGE clusters 2.475 +via hierarchial complete linkage clustering with un-centred correlation as the similarity score. 2.476 +[6 ] clustered genes, starting out by selecting 135 genes out of 20,000 which had high variance over voxels and 2.477 +which were highly correlated with many other genes. They computed the matrix of (rank) correlations between 2.478 +pairs of these genes, and ordered the rows of this matrix as follows: &#8220;the first row of the matrix was chosen to 2.479 +show the strongest contrast between the highest and lowest correlation coefficient for that row. The remaining 2.480 +rows were then arranged in order of decreasing similarity using a least squares metric&#8221;. The resulting matrix 2.481 +showed four clusters. For each cluster, prototypical spatial expression patterns were created by averaging the 2.482 +genes in the cluster. The prototypes were analyzed manually, without clustering voxels. 2.483 +[10 ] applies their technique for finding combinations of marker genes for the purpose of clustering genes 2.484 +around a &#8220;seed gene&#8221;. They do this by using the pattern of expression of the seed gene as the target image, and 2.485 +then searching for other genes which can be combined to reproduce this pattern. Other genes which are found 2.486 +are considered to be related to the seed. The same team also describes a method[25] for finding &#8220;association 2.487 +rules&#8221; such as, &#8220;if this voxel is expressed in by any gene, then that voxel is probably also expressed in by the 2.488 +same gene&#8221;. This could be useful as part of a procedure for clustering voxels. 2.489 +In summary, although these projects obtained clusterings, there has not been much comparison between 2.490 +different algorithms or scoring methods, so it is likely that the best clustering method for this application has not 2.491 +yet been found. The projects using gene expression on cortex did not attempt to make use of the radial profile 2.492 +of gene expression. Also, none of these projects did a separate dimensionality reduction step before clustering 2.493 +pixels, none tried to cluster genes first in order to guide automated clustering of pixels into spatial regions, and 2.494 +none used co-clustering algorithms. 2.495 +________ 2.496 +possibility is that, although the cluster prototype fits an anatomical region, the individual genes are each somewhat different from the 2.497 +prototype. 2.498 + 9A radial profile is a profile along a line perpendicular to the cortical surface. 2.499 + 10We ran &#8220;vanilla&#8221; NNMF, whereas the paper under discussion used a modified method. Their main modification consisted of adding 2.500 +a soft spatial contiguity constraint. However, on our dataset, NNMF naturally produced spatially contiguous clusters, so no additional 2.501 +constraint was needed. The paper under discussion also mentions that they tried a hierarchial variant of NNMF, which we have not yet 2.502 +tried. 2.503 Aim 3: apply the methods developed to the cerebral cortex 2.504 Background 2.505 -The cortex is divided into areas and layers. Because of the cortical columnar organization, the parcellation of the cortex 2.506 -into areas can be drawn as a 2-D map on the surface of the cortex. In the third dimension, the boundaries between the 2.507 -areas continue downwards into the cortical depth, perpendicular to the surface. The layer boundaries run parallel to the 2.508 -surface. One can picture an area of the cortex as a slice of a six-layered cake11. 2.509 -It is known that different cortical areas have distinct roles in both normal functioning and in disease processes, yet there 2.510 -are no known marker genes for most cortical areas. When it is necessary to divide a tissue sample into cortical areas, this is 2.511 -a manual process that requires a skilled human to combine multiple visual cues and interpret them in the context of their 2.512 -approximate location upon the cortical surface. 2.513 -Even the questions of how many areas should be recognized in cortex, and what their arrangement is, are still not 2.514 -completely settled. A proposed division of the cortex into areas is called a cortical map. In the rodent, the lack of a single 2.515 -agreed-upon map can be seen by contrasting the recent maps given by Swanson[21] on the one hand, and Paxinos and 2.516 -Franklin[16] on the other. While the maps are certainly very similar in their general arrangement, significant differences 2.517 -remain. 2.518 +The cortex is divided into areas and layers. Because of the cortical columnar organization, the parcellation 2.519 +of the cortex into areas can be drawn as a 2-D map on the surface of the cortex. In the third dimension, the 2.520 +boundaries between the areas continue downwards into the cortical depth, perpendicular to the surface. The 2.521 +layer boundaries run parallel to the surface. One can picture an area of the cortex as a slice of a six-layered 2.522 +cake11 . 2.523 +It is known that different cortical areas have distinct roles in both normal functioning and in disease processes, 2.524 +yet there are no known marker genes for most cortical areas. When it is necessary to divide a tissue sample 2.525 +into cortical areas, this is a manual process that requires a skilled human to combine multiple visual cues and 2.526 +interpret them in the context of their approximate location upon the cortical surface. 2.527 +Even the questions of how many areas should be recognized in cortex, and what their arrangement is, are 2.528 +still not completely settled. A proposed division of the cortex into areas is called a cortical map. In the rodent, 2.529 +the lack of a single agreed-upon map can be seen by contrasting the recent maps given by Swanson[22] on the 2.530 +one hand, and Paxinos and Franklin[17] on the other. While the maps are certainly very similar in their general 2.531 +arrangement, significant differences remain. 2.532 The Allen Mouse Brain Atlas dataset 2.533 -The Allen Mouse Brain Atlas (ABA) data were produced by doing in-situ hybridization on slices of male, 56-day-old 2.534 -C57BL/6J mouse brains. Pictures were taken of the processed slice, and these pictures were semi-automatically analyzed 2.535 -to create a digital measurement of gene expression levels at each location in each slice. Per slice, cellular spatial resolution 2.536 -is achieved. Using this method, a single physical slice can only be used to measure one single gene; many different mouse 2.537 -brains were needed in order to measure the expression of many genes. 2.538 -An automated nonlinear alignment procedure located the 2D data from the various slices in a single 3D coordinate 2.539 -system. In the final 3D coordinate system, voxels are cubes with 200 microns on a side. There are 67x41x58 = 159,326 2.540 -voxels in the 3D coordinate system, of which 51,533 are in the brain[14]. 2.541 -Mus musculus is thought to contain about 22,000 protein-coding genes[27]. The ABA contains data on about 20,000 2.542 -genes in sagittal sections, out of which over 4,000 genes are also measured in coronal sections. Our dataset is derived from 2.543 -only the coronal subset of the ABA12. 2.544 -The ABA is not the only large public spatial gene expression dataset13. With the exception of the ABA, GenePaint, and 2.545 -EMAGE, most of the other resources have not (yet) extracted the expression intensity from the ISH images and registered 2.546 -the results into a single 3-D space, and to our knowledge only ABA and EMAGE make this form of data available for public 2.547 -download from the website14. Many of these resources focus on developmental gene expression. 2.548 +The Allen Mouse Brain Atlas (ABA) data were produced by doing in-situ hybridization on slices of male, 2.549 +56-day-old C57BL/6J mouse brains. Pictures were taken of the processed slice, and these pictures were semi- 2.550 +automatically analyzed to create a digital measurement of gene expression levels at each location in each slice. 2.551 +Per slice, cellular spatial resolution is achieved. Using this method, a single physical slice can only be used 2.552 +to measure one single gene; many different mouse brains were needed in order to measure the expression of 2.553 +many genes. 2.554 +An automated nonlinear alignment procedure located the 2D data from the various slices in a single 3D 2.555 +coordinate system. In the final 3D coordinate system, voxels are cubes with 200 microns on a side. There are 2.556 +67x41x58 = 159,326 voxels in the 3D coordinate system, of which 51,533 are in the brain[15]. 2.557 +Mus musculus is thought to contain about 22,000 protein-coding genes[28]. The ABA contains data on about 2.558 +20,000 genes in sagittal sections, out of which over 4,000 genes are also measured in coronal sections. Our 2.559 +dataset is derived from only the coronal subset of the ABA12. 2.560 +The ABA is not the only large public spatial gene expression dataset13. With the exception of the ABA, 2.561 +GenePaint, and EMAGE, most of the other resources have not (yet) extracted the expression intensity from the 2.562 +ISH images and registered the results into a single 3-D space, and to our knowledge only ABA and EMAGE 2.563 +make this form of data available for public download from the website14. Many of these resources focus on 2.564 +developmental gene expression. 2.565 Related work 2.566 -[14 ] describes the application of AGEA to the cortex. The paper describes interesting results on the structure of correlations 2.567 -between voxel gene expression profiles within a handful of cortical areas. However, this sort of analysis is not related to either 2.568 -of our aims, as it neither finds marker genes, nor does it suggest a cortical map based on gene expression data. Neither of 2.569 -the other components of AGEA can be applied to cortical areas; AGEA&#8217;s Gene Finder cannot be used to find marker genes 2.570 -for the cortical areas; and AGEA&#8217;s hierarchial clustering does not produce clusters corresponding to the cortical areas15. 2.571 -In summary, for all three aims, (a) only one of the previous projects explores combinations of marker genes, (b) there has 2.572 -been almost no comparison of different algorithms or scoring methods, and (c) there has been no work on computationally 2.573 -finding marker genes for cortical areas, or on finding a hierarchial clustering that will yield a map of cortical areas de novo 2.574 -from gene expression data. 2.575 -___________________ 2.576 - 11Outside of isocortex, the number of layers varies. 2.577 - 12The sagittal data do not cover the entire cortex, and also have greater registration error[14]. Genes were selected by the Allen Institute for 2.578 -coronal sectioning based on, &#8220;classes of known neuroscientific interest... or through post hoc identification of a marked non-ubiquitous expression 2.579 -pattern&#8221;[14]. 2.580 - 13Other such resources include GENSAT[8], GenePaint[26], its sister project GeneAtlas[5], BGEM[13], EMAGE[25], EurExpress (http: 2.581 -//www.eurexpress.org/ee/; EurExpress data are also entered into EMAGE), EADHB (http://www.ncl.ac.uk/ihg/EADHB/database/$EADHB_ 2.582 -{database}$.html), MAMEP (http://mamep.molgen.mpg.de/index.php), Xenbase (http://xenbase.org/), ZFIN[20], Aniseed (http:// 2.583 -aniseed-ibdm.univ-mrs.fr/), VisiGene (http://genome.ucsc.edu/cgi-bin/hgVisiGene ; includes data from some of the other listed data 2.584 -sources), GEISHA[4], Fruitfly.org[23], COMPARE (http://compare.ibdml.univ-mrs.fr/), GXD[19], GEO[3] (GXD and GEO contain spatial 2.585 -data but also non-spatial data. All GXD spatial data are also in EMAGE.) 2.586 - 14without prior offline registration 2.587 - 15In both cases, the cause is that pairwise correlations between the gene expression of voxels in different areas but the same layer are often stronger 2.588 -than pairwise correlations between the gene expression of voxels in different layers but the same area. Therefore, a pairwise voxel correlation 2.589 -clustering algorithm will tend to create clusters representing cortical layers, not areas (there may be clusters which presumably correspond to the 2.590 -intersection of a layer and an area, but since one area will have many layer-area intersection clusters, further work is needed to make sense of 2.591 -these). The reason that Gene Finder cannot the find marker genes for cortical areas is that, although the user chooses a seed voxel, Gene Finder 2.592 -chooses the ROI for which genes will be found, and it creates that ROI by (pairwise voxel correlation) clustering around the seed. 2.593 -Our project is guided by a concrete application with a well-specified criterion of success (how well we can find marker 2.594 -genes for / reproduce the layout of cortical areas), which will provide a solid basis for comparing different methods. 2.595 +[15 ] describes the application of AGEA to the cortex. The paper describes interesting results on the structure 2.596 +of correlations between voxel gene expression profiles within a handful of cortical areas. However, this sort 2.597 +of analysis is not related to either of our aims, as it neither finds marker genes, nor does it suggest a cortical 2.598 +map based on gene expression data. Neither of the other components of AGEA can be applied to cortical 2.599 +_________________________________________ 2.600 + 11Outside of isocortex, the number of layers varies. 2.601 + 12The sagittal data do not cover the entire cortex, and also have greater registration error[15]. Genes were selected by the Allen 2.602 +Institute for coronal sectioning based on, &#8220;classes of known neuroscientific interest... or through post hoc identification of a marked 2.603 +non-ubiquitous expression pattern&#8221;[15]. 2.604 + 13Other such resources include GENSAT[8], GenePaint[27], its sister project GeneAtlas[5], BGEM[14], EMAGE[26], EurExpress 2.605 +(http://www.eurexpress.org/ee/; EurExpress data are also entered into EMAGE), EADHB (http://www.ncl.ac.uk/ihg/EADHB/ 2.606 +database/EADHB_database.html), MAMEP (http://mamep.molgen.mpg.de/index.php), Xenbase (http://xenbase.org/), ZFIN[21], 2.607 +Aniseed (http://aniseed-ibdm.univ-mrs.fr/), VisiGene (http://genome.ucsc.edu/cgi-bin/hgVisiGene ; includes data from some 2.608 +of the other listed data sources), GEISHA[4], Fruitfly.org[24], COMPARE (http://compare.ibdml.univ-mrs.fr/), GXD[20], GEO[3] 2.609 +(GXD and GEO contain spatial data but also non-spatial data. All GXD spatial data are also in EMAGE.) 2.610 + 14without prior offline registration 2.611 +areas; AGEA&#8217;s Gene Finder cannot be used to find marker genes for the cortical areas; and AGEA&#8217;s hierarchial 2.612 +clustering does not produce clusters corresponding to the cortical areas15. 2.613 +In summary, for all three aims, (a) only one of the previous projects explores combinations of marker genes, 2.614 +(b) there has been almost no comparison of different algorithms or scoring methods, and (c) there has been no 2.615 +work on computationally finding marker genes for cortical areas, or on finding a hierarchial clustering that will 2.616 +yield a map of cortical areas de novo from gene expression data. 2.617 +Our project is guided by a concrete application with a well-specified criterion of success (how well we can 2.618 +find marker genes for / reproduce the layout of cortical areas), which will provide a solid basis for comparing 2.619 +different methods. 2.620 Significance 2.621 2.622 2.623 -Figure 1: Top row: Genes Nfic and 2.624 -A930001M12Rik are the most correlated 2.625 -with area SS (somatosensory cortex). Bot- 2.626 -tom row: Genes C130038G02Rik and 2.627 -Cacna1i are those with the best fit using 2.628 -logistic regression. Within each picture, the 2.629 -vertical axis roughly corresponds to anterior 2.630 -at the top and posterior at the bottom, and 2.631 -the horizontal axis roughly corresponds to 2.632 -medial at the left and lateral at the right. 2.633 -The red outline is the boundary of region 2.634 -SS. Pixels are colored according to correla- 2.635 -tion, with red meaning high correlation and 2.636 -blue meaning low. The method developed in aim (1) will be applied to each cortical area to find 2.637 - a set of marker genes such that the combinatorial expression pattern of those 2.638 - genes uniquely picks out the target area. Finding marker genes will be useful 2.639 - for drug discovery as well as for experimentation because marker genes can be 2.640 - used to design interventions which selectively target individual cortical areas. 2.641 - The application of the marker gene finding algorithm to the cortex will 2.642 - also support the development of new neuroanatomical methods. In addition 2.643 - to finding markers for each individual cortical areas, we will find a small panel 2.644 - of genes that can find many of the areal boundaries at once. This panel of 2.645 - marker genes will allow the development of an ISH protocol that will allow 2.646 - experimenters to more easily identify which anatomical areas are present in 2.647 - small samples of cortex. 2.648 - The method developed in aim (2) will provide a genoarchitectonic viewpoint 2.649 - that will contribute to the creation of a better map. The development of 2.650 - present-day cortical maps was driven by the application of histological stains. 2.651 - If a different set of stains had been available which identified a different set of 2.652 - features, then today&#8217;s cortical maps may have come out differently. It is likely 2.653 - that there are many repeated, salient spatial patterns in the gene expression 2.654 - which have not yet been captured by any stain. Therefore, cortical anatomy 2.655 - needs to incorporate what we can learn from looking at the patterns of gene 2.656 - expression. 2.657 - While we do not here propose to analyze human gene expression data, it is 2.658 - conceivable that the methods we propose to develop could be used to suggest 2.659 - modifications to the human cortical map as well. In fact, the methods we will 2.660 - develop will be applicable to other datasets beyond the brain. We will provide 2.661 - an open-source toolbox to allow other researchers to easily use our methods. 2.662 - With these methods, researchers with gene expression for any area of the body 2.663 - will be able to efficiently find marker genes for anatomical regions, or to use 2.664 - gene expression to discover new anatomical patterning. As described above, 2.665 -marker genes have a variety of uses in the development of drugs and experimental manipulations, and in the anatomical 2.666 -characterization of tissue samples. The discovery of new ways to carve up anatomical structures into regions may lead to 2.667 -the discovery of new anatomical subregions in various structures, which will widely impact all areas of biology. 2.668 +Figure 1: Top row: Genes Nfic 2.669 +and A930001M12Rik are the most 2.670 +correlated with area SS (somatosen- 2.671 +sory cortex). Bottom row: Genes 2.672 +C130038G02Rik and Cacna1i are 2.673 +those with the best fit using logistic 2.674 +regression. Within each picture, the 2.675 +vertical axis roughly corresponds to 2.676 +anterior at the top and posterior at the 2.677 +bottom, and the horizontal axis roughly 2.678 +corresponds to medial at the left and 2.679 +lateral at the right. The red outline is 2.680 +the boundary of region SS. Pixels are 2.681 +colored according to correlation, with 2.682 +red meaning high correlation and blue 2.683 +meaning low. The method developed in aim (1) will be applied to each cortical area to 2.684 + find a set of marker genes such that the combinatorial expression pat- 2.685 + tern of those genes uniquely picks out the target area. Finding marker 2.686 + genes will be useful for drug discovery as well as for experimentation 2.687 + because marker genes can be used to design interventions which se- 2.688 + lectively target individual cortical areas. 2.689 + The application of the marker gene finding algorithm to the cortex 2.690 + will also support the development of new neuroanatomical methods. In 2.691 + addition to finding markers for each individual cortical areas, we will 2.692 + find a small panel of genes that can find many of the areal boundaries 2.693 + at once. This panel of marker genes will allow the development of an 2.694 + ISH protocol that will allow experimenters to more easily identify which 2.695 + anatomical areas are present in small samples of cortex. 2.696 + The method developed in aim (2) will provide a genoarchitectonic 2.697 + viewpoint that will contribute to the creation of a better map. The de- 2.698 + velopment of present-day cortical maps was driven by the application 2.699 + of histological stains. If a different set of stains had been available 2.700 + which identified a different set of features, then today&#8217;s cortical maps 2.701 + may have come out differently. It is likely that there are many repeated, 2.702 + salient spatial patterns in the gene expression which have not yet been 2.703 + captured by any stain. Therefore, cortical anatomy needs to incorpo- 2.704 + rate what we can learn from looking at the patterns of gene expression. 2.705 + While we do not here propose to analyze human gene expression 2.706 + data, it is conceivable that the methods we propose to develop could 2.707 + be used to suggest modifications to the human cortical map as well. In 2.708 + fact, the methods we will develop will be applicable to other datasets 2.709 + beyond the brain. We will provide an open-source toolbox to allow 2.710 + other researchers to easily use our methods. With these methods, re- 2.711 + searchers with gene expression for any area of the body will be able to 2.712 +efficiently find marker genes for anatomical regions, or to use gene expression to discover new anatomical pat- 2.713 +terning. As described above, marker genes have a variety of uses in the development of drugs and experimental 2.714 +manipulations, and in the anatomical characterization of tissue samples. The discovery of new ways to carve up 2.715 +anatomical structures into regions may lead to the discovery of new anatomical subregions in various structures, 2.716 +_________________________________________ 2.717 + 15In both cases, the cause is that pairwise correlations between the gene expression of voxels in different areas but the same layer 2.718 +are often stronger than pairwise correlations between the gene expression of voxels in different layers but the same area. Therefore, a 2.719 +pairwise voxel correlation clustering algorithm will tend to create clusters representing cortical layers, not areas (there may be clusters 2.720 +which presumably correspond to the intersection of a layer and an area, but since one area will have many layer-area intersection 2.721 +clusters, further work is needed to make sense of these). The reason that Gene Finder cannot the find marker genes for cortical areas 2.722 +is that, although the user chooses a seed voxel, Gene Finder chooses the ROI for which genes will be found, and it creates that ROI by 2.723 +(pairwise voxel correlation) clustering around the seed. 2.724 +which will widely impact all areas of biology. 2.725 2.726 -Figure 2: Gene Pitx2 2.727 -is selectively underex- 2.728 -pressed in area SS. Although our particular application involves the 3D spatial distribution of gene expression, we 2.729 - anticipate that the methods developed in aims (1) and (2) will not be limited to gene expression 2.730 - data, but rather will generalize to any sort of high-dimensional data over points located in a 2.731 - low-dimensional space. 2.732 - The approach: Preliminary Studies 2.733 +Figure 2: Gene Pitx2 2.734 +is selectively underex- 2.735 +pressed in area SS. Although our particular application involves the 3D spatial distribution of gene ex- 2.736 + pression, we anticipate that the methods developed in aims (1) and (2) will not be limited 2.737 + to gene expression data, but rather will generalize to any sort of high-dimensional data 2.738 + over points located in a low-dimensional space. 2.739 + The approach: Preliminary Studies 2.740 Format conversion between SEV, MATLAB, NIFTI 2.741 - We have created software to (politely) download all of the SEV files16 from the Allen Institute 2.742 - website. We have also created software to convert between the SEV, MATLAB, and NIFTI file 2.743 - formats, as well as some of Caret&#8217;s file formats. 2.744 + We have created software to (politely) download all of the SEV files16 from the Allen 2.745 + Institute website. We have also created software to convert between the SEV, MATLAB, 2.746 + and NIFTI file formats, as well as some of Caret&#8217;s file formats. 2.747 Flatmap of cortex 2.748 - We downloaded the ABA data and applied a mask to select only those voxels which belong to 2.749 - cerebral cortex. We divided the cortex into hemispheres. 2.750 -Using Caret[7], we created a mesh representation of the surface of the selected voxels. For each gene, and for each node 2.751 -of the mesh, we calculated an average of the gene expression of the voxels &#8220;underneath&#8221; that mesh node. We then flattened 2.752 -the cortex, creating a two-dimensional mesh. 2.753 -____ 2.754 - 16SEV is a sparse format for spatial data. It is the format in which the ABA data is made available. 2.755 - 2.756 + We downloaded the ABA data and applied a mask to select only those voxels which 2.757 +belong to cerebral cortex. We divided the cortex into hemispheres. 2.758 +Using Caret[7], we created a mesh representation of the surface of the selected voxels. For each gene, and 2.759 +for each node of the mesh, we calculated an average of the gene expression of the voxels &#8220;underneath&#8221; that 2.760 +mesh node. We then flattened the cortex, creating a two-dimensional mesh. 2.761 2.762 2.763 -Figure 3: The top row shows the two genes 2.764 -which (individually) best predict area AUD, 2.765 -according to logistic regression. The bot- 2.766 -tom row shows the two genes which (indi- 2.767 -vidually) best match area AUD, according 2.768 -to gradient similarity. From left to right and 2.769 -top to bottom, the genes are Ssr1, Efcbp1, 2.770 -Ptk7, and Aph1a. We sampled the nodes of the irregular, flat mesh in order to create a regular 2.771 - grid of pixel values. We converted this grid into a MATLAB matrix. 2.772 - We manually traced the boundaries of each of 49 cortical areas from the 2.773 - ABA coronal reference atlas slides. We then converted these manual traces 2.774 - into Caret-format regional boundary data on the mesh surface. We projected 2.775 - the regions onto the 2-d mesh, and then onto the grid, and then we converted 2.776 - the region data into MATLAB format. 2.777 - At this point, the data are in the form of a number of 2-D matrices, all in 2.778 - registration, with the matrix entries representing a grid of points (pixels) over 2.779 - the cortical surface: 2.780 - &#x2219; A 2-D matrix whose entries represent the regional label associated with 2.781 - each surface pixel 2.782 - &#x2219; For each gene, a 2-D matrix whose entries represent the average expres- 2.783 - sion level underneath each surface pixel 2.784 - We created a normalized version of the gene expression data by subtracting 2.785 - each gene&#8217;s mean expression level (over all surface pixels) and dividing the 2.786 - expression level of each gene by its standard deviation. 2.787 - The features and the target area are both functions on the surface pix- 2.788 - els. They can be referred to as scalar fields over the space of surface pixels; 2.789 - alternately, they can be thought of as images which can be displayed on the 2.790 - flatmapped surface. 2.791 - To move beyond a single average expression level for each surface pixel, we 2.792 -plan to create a separate matrix for each cortical layer to represent the average expression level within that layer. Cortical 2.793 -layers are found at different depths in different parts of the cortex. In preparation for extracting the layer-specific datasets, 2.794 -we have extended Caret with routines that allow the depth of the ROI for volume-to-surface projection to vary. 2.795 -In the Research Plan, we describe how we will automatically locate the layer depths. For validation, we have manually 2.796 -demarcated the depth of the outer boundary of cortical layer 5 throughout the cortex. 2.797 +Figure 3: The top row shows the two 2.798 +genes which (individually) best predict 2.799 +area AUD, according to logistic regres- 2.800 +sion. The bottom row shows the two 2.801 +genes which (individually) best match 2.802 +area AUD, according to gradient sim- 2.803 +ilarity. From left to right and top to 2.804 +bottom, the genes are Ssr1, Efcbp1, 2.805 +Ptk7, and Aph1a. We sampled the nodes of the irregular, flat mesh in order to create 2.806 + a regular grid of pixel values. We converted this grid into a MATLAB 2.807 + matrix. 2.808 + We manually traced the boundaries of each of 49 cortical areas 2.809 + from the ABA coronal reference atlas slides. We then converted these 2.810 + manual traces into Caret-format regional boundary data on the mesh 2.811 + surface. We projected the regions onto the 2-d mesh, and then onto 2.812 + the grid, and then we converted the region data into MATLAB format. 2.813 + At this point, the data are in the form of a number of 2-D matrices, 2.814 + all in registration, with the matrix entries representing a grid of points 2.815 + (pixels) over the cortical surface: 2.816 + &#x2219; A 2-D matrix whose entries represent the regional label associ- 2.817 + ated with each surface pixel 2.818 + &#x2219; For each gene, a 2-D matrix whose entries represent the average 2.819 + expression level underneath each surface pixel 2.820 + We created a normalized version of the gene expression data by 2.821 + subtracting each gene&#8217;s mean expression level (over all surface pixels) 2.822 + and dividing the expression level of each gene by its standard deviation. 2.823 + The features and the target area are both functions on the surface 2.824 + pixels. They can be referred to as scalar fields over the space of sur- 2.825 + face pixels; alternately, they can be thought of as images which can be 2.826 + displayed on the flatmapped surface. 2.827 +To move beyond a single average expression level for each surface pixel, we plan to create a separate matrix 2.828 +for each cortical layer to represent the average expression level within that layer. Cortical layers are found at 2.829 +different depths in different parts of the cortex. In preparation for extracting the layer-specific datasets, we have 2.830 +extended Caret with routines that allow the depth of the ROI for volume-to-surface projection to vary. 2.831 +In the Research Plan, we describe how we will automatically locate the layer depths. For validation, we have 2.832 +manually demarcated the depth of the outer boundary of cortical layer 5 throughout the cortex. 2.833 +_________________________________________ 2.834 + 16SEV is a sparse format for spatial data. It is the format in which the ABA data is made available. 2.835 Feature selection and scoring methods 2.836 -Underexpression of a gene can serve as a marker Underexpression of a gene can sometimes serve as a marker. See, 2.837 -for example, Figure 2. 2.838 +Underexpression of a gene can serve as a marker Underexpression of a gene can sometimes serve as a 2.839 +marker. See, for example, Figure 2. 2.840 2.841 2.842 -Figure 4: Upper left: wwc1. Upper right: 2.843 -mtif2. Lower left: wwc1 + mtif2 (each 2.844 -pixel&#8217;s value on the lower left is the sum of 2.845 -the corresponding pixels in the upper row). Correlation Recall that the instances are surface pixels, and consider the 2.846 - problem of attempting to classify each instance as either a member of a partic- 2.847 - ular anatomical area, or not. The target area can be represented as a boolean 2.848 - mask over the surface pixels. 2.849 - One class of feature selection scoring methods contains methods which cal- 2.850 - culate some sort of &#8220;match&#8221; between each gene image and the target image. 2.851 - Those genes which match the best are good candidates for features. 2.852 - One of the simplest methods in this class is to use correlation as the match 2.853 - score. We calculated the correlation between each gene and each cortical area. 2.854 - The top row of Figure 1 shows the three genes most correlated with area SS. 2.855 - Conditional entropy An information-theoretic scoring method is to find 2.856 - features such that, if the features (gene expression levels) are known, uncer- 2.857 - tainty about the target (the regional identity) is reduced. Entropy measures 2.858 - uncertainty, so what we want is to find features such that the conditional dis- 2.859 - tribution of the target has minimal entropy. The distribution to which we are 2.860 - referring is the probability distribution over the population of surface pixels. 2.861 - The simplest way to use information theory is on discrete data, so we 2.862 - discretized our gene expression data by creating, for each gene, five thresholded 2.863 - boolean masks of the gene data. For each gene, we created a boolean mask 2.864 -of its expression levels using each of these thresholds: the mean of that gene, the mean minus one standard deviation, the 2.865 -mean minus two standard deviations, the mean plus one standard deviation, the mean plus two standard deviations. 2.866 -Now, for each region, we created and ran a forward stepwise procedure which attempted to find pairs of gene expression 2.867 -boolean masks such that the conditional entropy of the target area&#8217;s boolean mask, conditioned upon the pair of gene 2.868 -expression boolean masks, is minimized. 2.869 -This finds pairs of genes which are most informative (at least at these discretization thresholds) relative to the question, 2.870 -&#8220;Is this surface pixel a member of the target area?&#8221;. Its advantage over linear methods such as logistic regression is that it 2.871 -takes account of arbitrarily nonlinear relationships; for example, if the XOR of two variables predicts the target, conditional 2.872 -entropy would notice, whereas linear methods would not. 2.873 +Figure 4: Upper left: wwc1. Upper 2.874 +right: mtif2. Lower left: wwc1 + mtif2 2.875 +(each pixel&#8217;s value on the lower left is 2.876 +the sum of the corresponding pixels in 2.877 +the upper row). Correlation Recall that the instances are surface pixels, and con- 2.878 + sider the problem of attempting to classify each instance as either a 2.879 + member of a particular anatomical area, or not. The target area can be 2.880 + represented as a boolean mask over the surface pixels. 2.881 + One class of feature selection scoring methods contains methods 2.882 + which calculate some sort of &#8220;match&#8221; between each gene image and 2.883 + the target image. Those genes which match the best are good candi- 2.884 + dates for features. 2.885 + One of the simplest methods in this class is to use correlation as 2.886 + the match score. We calculated the correlation between each gene 2.887 + and each cortical area. The top row of Figure 1 shows the three genes 2.888 + most correlated with area SS. 2.889 + Conditional entropy An information-theoretic scoring method is 2.890 + to find features such that, if the features (gene expression levels) are 2.891 + known, uncertainty about the target (the regional identity) is reduced. 2.892 + Entropy measures uncertainty, so what we want is to find features such 2.893 + that the conditional distribution of the target has minimal entropy. The 2.894 + distribution to which we are referring is the probability distribution over 2.895 +the population of surface pixels. 2.896 +The simplest way to use information theory is on discrete data, so we discretized our gene expression data 2.897 +by creating, for each gene, five thresholded boolean masks of the gene data. For each gene, we created a 2.898 +boolean mask of its expression levels using each of these thresholds: the mean of that gene, the mean minus 2.899 +one standard deviation, the mean minus two standard deviations, the mean plus one standard deviation, the 2.900 +mean plus two standard deviations. 2.901 +Now, for each region, we created and ran a forward stepwise procedure which attempted to find pairs of gene 2.902 +expression boolean masks such that the conditional entropy of the target area&#8217;s boolean mask, conditioned upon 2.903 +the pair of gene expression boolean masks, is minimized. 2.904 +This finds pairs of genes which are most informative (at least at these discretization thresholds) relative to the 2.905 +question, &#8220;Is this surface pixel a member of the target area?&#8221;. Its advantage over linear methods such as logistic 2.906 +regression is that it takes account of arbitrarily nonlinear relationships; for example, if the XOR of two variables 2.907 +predicts the target, conditional entropy would notice, whereas linear methods would not. 2.908 +Gradient similarity We noticed that the previous two scoring methods, which are pointwise, often found 2.909 +genes whose pattern of expression did not look similar in shape to the target region. For this reason we designed 2.910 +a non-pointwise local scoring method to detect when a gene had a pattern of expression which looked like it had 2.911 +a boundary whose shape is similar to the shape of the target region. We call this scoring method &#8220;gradient 2.912 +similarity&#8221;. 2.913 +One might say that gradient similarity attempts to measure how much the border of the area of gene expres- 2.914 +sion and the border of the target region overlap. However, since gene expression falls off continuously rather 2.915 +than jumping from its maximum value to zero, the spatial pattern of a gene&#8217;s expression often does not have a 2.916 +discrete border. Therefore, instead of looking for a discrete border, we look for large gradients. Gradient similarity 2.917 +is a symmetric function over two images (i.e. two scalar fields). It is is high to the extent that matching pixels 2.918 +which have large values and large gradients also have gradients which are oriented in a similar direction. The 2.919 +formula is: 2.920 + &#x2211; 2.921 + pixel<img src="cmsy8-32.png" alt="&#x2208;" />pixels cos(abs(&#x2220;&#x2207;1 -&#x2220;&#x2207;2)) &#x22C5;|&#x2207;1| + |&#x2207;2| 2.922 + 2 &#x22C5; pixel_value1 + pixel_value2 2.923 + 2 2.924 + 2.925 2.926 2.927 2.928 2.929 -Figure 5: From left to right and top 2.930 -to bottom, single genes which roughly 2.931 -identify areas SS (somatosensory primary 2.932 -+ supplemental), SSs (supplemental so- 2.933 -matosensory), PIR (piriform), FRP (frontal 2.934 -pole), RSP (retrosplenial), COApm (Corti- 2.935 -cal amygdalar, posterior part, medial zone). 2.936 -Grouping some areas together, we have 2.937 -also found genes to identify the groups 2.938 +Figure 5: From left to right and top 2.939 +to bottom, single genes which roughly 2.940 +identify areas SS (somatosensory pri- 2.941 +mary + supplemental), SSs (supple- 2.942 +mental somatosensory), PIR (piriform), 2.943 +FRP (frontal pole), RSP (retrosple- 2.944 +nial), COApm (Cortical amygdalar, pos- 2.945 +terior part, medial zone). Grouping 2.946 +some areas together, we have also 2.947 +found genes to identify the groups 2.948 ACA+PL+ILA+DP+ORB+MO (anterior 2.949 -cingulate, prelimbic, infralimbic, dorsal pe- 2.950 -duncular, orbital, motor), posterior and lat- 2.951 -eral visual (VISpm, VISpl, VISI, VISp; pos- 2.952 -teromedial, posterolateral, lateral, and pri- 2.953 -mary visual; the posterior and lateral vi- 2.954 -sual area is distinguished from its neigh- 2.955 -bors, but not from the entire rest of the 2.956 -cortex). The genes are Pitx2, Aldh1a2, 2.957 -Ppfibp1, Slco1a5, Tshz2, Trhr, Col12a1, 2.958 -Ets1. Gradient similarity We noticed that the previous two scoring methods, 2.959 - which are pointwise, often found genes whose pattern of expression did not 2.960 - look similar in shape to the target region. For this reason we designed a 2.961 - non-pointwise local scoring method to detect when a gene had a pattern of 2.962 - expression which looked like it had a boundary whose shape is similar to the 2.963 - shape of the target region. We call this scoring method &#8220;gradient similarity&#8221;. 2.964 - One might say that gradient similarity attempts to measure how much the 2.965 - border of the area of gene expression and the border of the target region over- 2.966 - lap. However, since gene expression falls off continuously rather than jumping 2.967 - from its maximum value to zero, the spatial pattern of a gene&#8217;s expression often 2.968 - does not have a discrete border. Therefore, instead of looking for a discrete 2.969 - border, we look for large gradients. Gradient similarity is a symmetric function 2.970 - over two images (i.e. two scalar fields). It is is high to the extent that matching 2.971 - pixels which have large values and large gradients also have gradients which 2.972 - are oriented in a similar direction. The formula is: 2.973 - &#x2211; 2.974 - pixel<img src="cmsy7-32.png" alt="&#x2208;" />pixels cos(abs(&#x2220;&#x2207;1 -&#x2220;&#x2207;2)) &#x22C5;|&#x2207;1| + |&#x2207;2| 2.975 - 2 &#x22C5; pixel_value1 + pixel_value2 2.976 - 2 2.977 - where &#x2207;1 and &#x2207;2 are the gradient vectors of the two images at the current 2.978 - pixel; &#x2220;&#x2207;i is the angle of the gradient of image i at the current pixel; |&#x2207;i| is 2.979 - the magnitude of the gradient of image i at the current pixel; and pixel_valuei 2.980 - is the value of the current pixel in image i. 2.981 - The intuition is that we want to see if the borders of the pattern in the 2.982 - two images are similar; if the borders are similar, then both images will have 2.983 - corresponding pixels with large gradients (because this is a border) which are 2.984 - oriented in a similar direction (because the borders are similar). 2.985 +cingulate, prelimbic, infralimbic, dor- 2.986 +sal peduncular, orbital, motor), poste- 2.987 +rior and lateral visual (VISpm, VISpl, 2.988 +VISI, VISp; posteromedial, posterolat- 2.989 +eral, lateral, and primary visual; the 2.990 +posterior and lateral visual area is dis- 2.991 +tinguished from its neighbors, but not 2.992 +from the entire rest of the cortex). The 2.993 +genes are Pitx2, Aldh1a2, Ppfibp1, 2.994 +Slco1a5, Tshz2, Trhr, Col12a1, Ets1. where &#x2207;1 and &#x2207;2 are the gradient vectors of the two images at the 2.995 + current pixel; &#x2220;&#x2207;i is the angle of the gradient of image i at the current 2.996 + pixel; |&#x2207;i| is the magnitude of the gradient of image i at the current 2.997 + pixel; and pixel_valuei is the value of the current pixel in image i. 2.998 + The intuition is that we want to see if the borders of the pattern in 2.999 + the two images are similar; if the borders are similar, then both images 2.1000 + will have corresponding pixels with large gradients (because this is a 2.1001 + border) which are oriented in a similar direction (because the borders 2.1002 + are similar). 2.1003 Most of the genes in Figure 5 were identified via gradient similarity. 2.1004 - Gradient similarity provides information complementary to cor- 2.1005 - relation 2.1006 - To show that gradient similarity can provide useful information that cannot 2.1007 - be detected via pointwise analyses, consider Fig. 3. The top row of Fig. 3 2.1008 - displays the 3 genes which most match area AUD, according to a pointwise 2.1009 - method17. The bottom row displays the 3 genes which most match AUD ac- 2.1010 - cording to a method which considers local geometry18 The pointwise method 2.1011 - in the top row identifies genes which express more strongly in AUD than out- 2.1012 - side of it; its weakness is that this includes many areas which don&#8217;t have a 2.1013 - salient border matching the areal border. The geometric method identifies 2.1014 - genes whose salient expression border seems to partially line up with the bor- 2.1015 - der of AUD; its weakness is that this includes genes which don&#8217;t express over 2.1016 - the entire area. Genes which have high rankings using both pointwise and bor- 2.1017 - der criteria, such as Aph1a in the example, may be particularly good markers. 2.1018 - None of these genes are, individually, a perfect marker for AUD; we deliberately 2.1019 - chose a &#8220;difficult&#8221; area in order to better contrast pointwise with geometric 2.1020 - methods. 2.1021 - Areas which can be identified by single genes Using gradient simi- 2.1022 - larity, we have already found single genes which roughly identify some areas 2.1023 -and groupings of areas. For each of these areas, an example of a gene which roughly identifies it is shown in Figure 5. We 2.1024 -have not yet cross-verified these genes in other atlases. 2.1025 + Gradient similarity provides information complementary to 2.1026 + correlation 2.1027 + To show that gradient similarity can provide useful information that 2.1028 + cannot be detected via pointwise analyses, consider Fig. 3. The top 2.1029 + row of Fig. 3 displays the 3 genes which most match area AUD, ac- 2.1030 + cording to a pointwise method17. The bottom row displays the 3 genes 2.1031 + which most match AUD according to a method which considers local 2.1032 + geometry18 The pointwise method in the top row identifies genes which 2.1033 + express more strongly in AUD than outside of it; its weakness is that 2.1034 + this includes many areas which don&#8217;t have a salient border matching 2.1035 + the areal border. The geometric method identifies genes whose salient 2.1036 + expression border seems to partially line up with the border of AUD; 2.1037 + its weakness is that this includes genes which don&#8217;t express over the 2.1038 + entire area. Genes which have high rankings using both pointwise and 2.1039 + border criteria, such as Aph1a in the example, may be particularly good 2.1040 + markers. None of these genes are, individually, a perfect marker for 2.1041 + AUD; we deliberately chose a &#8220;difficult&#8221; area in order to better contrast 2.1042 + pointwise with geometric methods. 2.1043 + Areas which can be identified by single genes Using gradient 2.1044 + similarity, we have already found single genes which roughly identify 2.1045 + some areas and groupings of areas. For each of these areas, an ex- 2.1046 + ample of a gene which roughly identifies it is shown in Figure 5. We 2.1047 + have not yet cross-verified these genes in other atlases. 2.1048 + In addition, there are a number of areas which are almost identified 2.1049 + by single genes: COAa+NLOT (anterior part of cortical amygdalar area, 2.1050 + nucleus of the lateral olfactory tract), ENT (entorhinal), ACAv (ventral 2.1051 + anterior cingulate), VIS (visual), AUD (auditory). 2.1052 + These results validate our expectation that the ABA dataset can 2.1053 + be exploited to find marker genes for many cortical areas, while also 2.1054 + validating the relevancy of our new scoring method, gradient similarity. 2.1055 + Combinations of multiple genes are useful and necessary for 2.1056 + some areas 2.1057 + In Figure 4, we give an example of a cortical area which is not 2.1058 + marked by any single gene, but which can be identified combinatorially. 2.1059 +Acccording to logistic regression, gene wwc1 is the best fit single gene for predicting whether or not a pixel on 2.1060 +the cortical surface belongs to the motor area (area MO). The upper-left picture in Figure 4 shows wwc1&#8217;s spatial 2.1061 _________________________________________ 2.1062 - 17For each gene, a logistic regression in which the response variable was whether or not a surface pixel was within area AUD, and the predictor 2.1063 -variable was the value of the expression of the gene underneath that pixel. The resulting scores were used to rank the genes in terms of how well 2.1064 -they predict area AUD. 2.1065 - 18For each gene the gradient similarity between (a) a map of the expression of each gene on the cortical surface and (b) the shape of area AUD, 2.1066 -was calculated, and this was used to rank the genes. 2.1067 -In addition, there are a number of areas which are almost identified by single genes: COAa+NLOT (anterior part of 2.1068 -cortical amygdalar area, nucleus of the lateral olfactory tract), ENT (entorhinal), ACAv (ventral anterior cingulate), VIS 2.1069 -(visual), AUD (auditory). 2.1070 -These results validate our expectation that the ABA dataset can be exploited to find marker genes for many cortical 2.1071 -areas, while also validating the relevancy of our new scoring method, gradient similarity. 2.1072 -Combinations of multiple genes are useful and necessary for some areas 2.1073 -In Figure 4, we give an example of a cortical area which is not marked by any single gene, but which can be identified 2.1074 -combinatorially. Acccording to logistic regression, gene wwc1 is the best fit single gene for predicting whether or not a 2.1075 -pixel on the cortical surface belongs to the motor area (area MO). The upper-left picture in Figure 4 shows wwc1&#8217;s spatial 2.1076 -expression pattern over the cortex. The lower-right boundary of MO is represented reasonably well by this gene, but the 2.1077 -gene overshoots the upper-left boundary. This flattened 2-D representation does not show it, but the area corresponding 2.1078 -to the overshoot is the medial surface of the cortex. MO is only found on the dorsal surface. Gene mtif2 is shown in the 2.1079 -upper-right. Mtif2 captures MO&#8217;s upper-left boundary, but not its lower-right boundary. Mtif2 does not express very much 2.1080 -on the medial surface. By adding together the values at each pixel in these two figures, we get the lower-left image. This 2.1081 -combination captures area MO much better than any single gene. 2.1082 -This shows that our proposal to develop a method to find combinations of marker genes is both possible and necessary. 2.1083 -Feature selection integrated with prediction As noted earlier, in general, any classifier can be used for feature 2.1084 -selection by running it inside a stepwise wrapper. Also, some learning algorithms integrate soft constraints on number of 2.1085 -features used. Examples of both of these will be seen in the section &#8220;Multivariate supervised learning&#8221;. 2.1086 + 17For each gene, a logistic regression in which the response variable was whether or not a surface pixel was within area AUD, and the 2.1087 +predictor variable was the value of the expression of the gene underneath that pixel. The resulting scores were used to rank the genes 2.1088 +in terms of how well they predict area AUD. 2.1089 + 18For each gene the gradient similarity between (a) a map of the expression of each gene on the cortical surface and (b) the shape of 2.1090 +area AUD, was calculated, and this was used to rank the genes. 2.1091 +expression pattern over the cortex. The lower-right boundary of MO is represented reasonably well by this gene, 2.1092 +but the gene overshoots the upper-left boundary. This flattened 2-D representation does not show it, but the 2.1093 +area corresponding to the overshoot is the medial surface of the cortex. MO is only found on the dorsal surface. 2.1094 +Gene mtif2 is shown in the upper-right. Mtif2 captures MO&#8217;s upper-left boundary, but not its lower-right boundary. 2.1095 +Mtif2 does not express very much on the medial surface. By adding together the values at each pixel in these 2.1096 +two figures, we get the lower-left image. This combination captures area MO much better than any single gene. 2.1097 +This shows that our proposal to develop a method to find combinations of marker genes is both possible and 2.1098 +necessary. 2.1099 +Feature selection integrated with prediction As noted earlier, in general, any classifier can be used for fea- 2.1100 +ture selection by running it inside a stepwise wrapper. Also, some learning algorithms integrate soft constraints 2.1101 +on number of features used. Examples of both of these will be seen in the section &#8220;Multivariate supervised 2.1102 +learning&#8221;. 2.1103 Multivariate supervised learning 2.1104 2.1105 2.1106 2.1107 2.1108 -Figure 6: First row: the first 6 reduced dimensions, using PCA. Second 2.1109 -row: the first 6 reduced dimensions, using NNMF. Third row: the first 2.1110 -six reduced dimensions, using landmark Isomap. Bottom row: examples 2.1111 -of kmeans clustering applied to reduced datasets to find 7 clusters. Left: 2.1112 -19 of the major subdivisions of the cortex. Second from left: PCA. Third 2.1113 -from left: NNMF. Right: Landmark Isomap. Additional details: In the 2.1114 -third and fourth rows, 7 dimensions were found, but only 6 displayed. In 2.1115 -the last row: for PCA, 50 dimensions were used; for NNMF, 6 dimensions 2.1116 -were used; for landmark Isomap, 7 dimensions were used. Forward stepwise logistic regression Lo- 2.1117 - gistic regression is a popular method for pre- 2.1118 - dictive modeling of categorial data. As a pi- 2.1119 - lot run, for five cortical areas (SS, AUD, RSP, 2.1120 - VIS, and MO), we performed forward stepwise 2.1121 - logistic regression to find single genes, pairs of 2.1122 - genes, and triplets of genes which predict areal 2.1123 - identify. This is an example of feature selec- 2.1124 - tion integrated with prediction using a stepwise 2.1125 - wrapper. Some of the single genes found were 2.1126 - shown in various figures throughout this doc- 2.1127 - ument, and Figure 4 shows a combination of 2.1128 - genes which was found. 2.1129 - We felt that, for single genes, gradient simi- 2.1130 - larity did a better job than logistic regression at 2.1131 - capturing our subjective impression of a &#8220;good 2.1132 - gene&#8221;. 2.1133 - SVM on all genes at once 2.1134 - In order to see how well one can do when 2.1135 - looking at all genes at once, we ran a support 2.1136 - vector machine to classify cortical surface pix- 2.1137 - els based on their gene expression profiles. We 2.1138 - achieved classification accuracy of about 81%19. 2.1139 - This shows that the genes included in the ABA 2.1140 - dataset are sufficient to define much of cortical 2.1141 - anatomy. However, as noted above, a classifier 2.1142 - that looks at all the genes at once isn&#8217;t as prac- 2.1143 - tically useful as a classifier that uses only a few 2.1144 - genes. 2.1145 +Figure 6: First row: the first 6 reduced dimensions, using PCA. Sec- 2.1146 +ond row: the first 6 reduced dimensions, using NNMF. Third row: 2.1147 +the first six reduced dimensions, using landmark Isomap. Bottom 2.1148 +row: examples of kmeans clustering applied to reduced datasets 2.1149 +to find 7 clusters. Left: 19 of the major subdivisions of the cortex. 2.1150 +Second from left: PCA. Third from left: NNMF. Right: Landmark 2.1151 +Isomap. Additional details: In the third and fourth rows, 7 dimen- 2.1152 +sions were found, but only 6 displayed. In the last row: for PCA, 2.1153 +50 dimensions were used; for NNMF, 6 dimensions were used; for 2.1154 +landmark Isomap, 7 dimensions were used. Forward stepwise logistic regression 2.1155 + Logistic regression is a popular method 2.1156 + for predictive modeling of categorial data. 2.1157 + As a pilot run, for five cortical areas (SS, 2.1158 + AUD, RSP, VIS, and MO), we performed 2.1159 + forward stepwise logistic regression to find 2.1160 + single genes, pairs of genes, and triplets 2.1161 + of genes which predict areal identify. This 2.1162 + is an example of feature selection inte- 2.1163 + grated with prediction using a stepwise 2.1164 + wrapper. Some of the single genes found 2.1165 + were shown in various figures throughout 2.1166 + this document, and Figure 4 shows a com- 2.1167 + bination of genes which was found. 2.1168 + We felt that, for single genes, gradi- 2.1169 + ent similarity did a better job than logistic 2.1170 + regression at capturing our subjective im- 2.1171 + pression of a &#8220;good gene&#8221;. 2.1172 + SVM on all genes at once 2.1173 + In order to see how well one can do 2.1174 + when looking at all genes at once, we ran 2.1175 + a support vector machine to classify corti- 2.1176 + cal surface pixels based on their gene ex- 2.1177 + pression profiles. We achieved classifica- 2.1178 + tion accuracy of about 81%19. This shows 2.1179 + that the genes included in the ABA dataset 2.1180 + are sufficient to define much of cortical 2.1181 + anatomy. However, as noted above, a clas- 2.1182 + sifier that looks at all the genes at once isn&#8217;t 2.1183 +as practically useful as a classifier that uses only a few genes. 2.1184 _________________________________________ 2.1185 - 195-fold cross-validation. 2.1186 - Data-driven redrawing of the cor- 2.1187 - tical map 2.1188 -We have applied the following dimensionality reduction algorithms to reduce the dimensionality of the gene expression 2.1189 -profile associated with each voxel: Principal Components Analysis (PCA), Simple PCA (SPCA), Multi-Dimensional Scaling 2.1190 -(MDS), Isomap, Landmark Isomap, Laplacian eigenmaps, Local Tangent Space Alignment (LTSA), Hessian locally linear 2.1191 -embedding, Diffusion maps, Stochastic Neighbor Embedding (SNE), Stochastic Proximity Embedding (SPE), Fast Maximum 2.1192 -Variance Unfolding (FastMVU), Non-negative Matrix Factorization (NNMF). Space constraints prevent us from showing 2.1193 -many of the results, but as a sample, PCA, NNMF, and landmark Isomap are shown in the first, second, and third rows of 2.1194 -Figure 6. 2.1195 -After applying the dimensionality reduction, we ran clustering algorithms on the reduced data. To date we have tried 2.1196 -k-means and spectral clustering. The results of k-means after PCA, NNMF, and landmark Isomap are shown in the last 2.1197 -row of Figure 6. To compare, the leftmost picture on the bottom row of Figure 6 shows some of the major subdivisions of 2.1198 -cortex. These results clearly show that different dimensionality reduction techniques capture different aspects of the data 2.1199 -and lead to different clusterings, indicating the utility of our proposal to produce a detailed comparion of these techniques 2.1200 -as applied to the domain of genomic anatomy. 2.1201 + 195-fold cross-validation. 2.1202 +Data-driven redrawing of the cortical map 2.1203 +We have applied the following dimensionality reduction algorithms to reduce the dimensionality of the gene 2.1204 +expression profile associated with each pixel: Principal Components Analysis (PCA), Simple PCA (SPCA), Multi- 2.1205 +Dimensional Scaling (MDS), Isomap, Landmark Isomap, Laplacian eigenmaps, Local Tangent Space Alignment 2.1206 +(LTSA), Stochastic Proximity Embedding (SPE), Fast Maximum Variance Unfolding (FastMVU), Non-negative 2.1207 +Matrix Factorization (NNMF). Space constraints prevent us from showing many of the results, but as a sample, 2.1208 +PCA, NNMF, and landmark Isomap are shown in the first, second, and third rows of Figure 6. 2.1209 +After applying the dimensionality reduction, we ran clustering algorithms on the reduced data. To date we 2.1210 +have tried k-means and spectral clustering. The results of k-means after PCA, NNMF, and landmark Isomap are 2.1211 +shown in the last row of Figure 6. To compare, the leftmost picture on the bottom row of Figure 6 shows some 2.1212 +of the major subdivisions of cortex. These results clearly show that different dimensionality reduction techniques 2.1213 +capture different aspects of the data and lead to different clusterings, indicating the utility of our proposal to 2.1214 +produce a detailed comparion of these techniques as applied to the domain of genomic anatomy. 2.1215 2.1216 -Figure 7: Prototypes corresponding to sample gene clusters, 2.1217 -clustered by gradient similarity. Region boundaries for the 2.1218 -region that most matches each prototype are overlayed. Many areas are captured by clusters of genes We 2.1219 - also clustered the genes using gradient similarity to see if 2.1220 - the spatial regions defined by any clusters matched known 2.1221 - anatomical regions. Figure 7 shows, for ten sample gene 2.1222 - clusters, each cluster&#8217;s average expression pattern, compared 2.1223 - to a known anatomical boundary. This suggests that it is 2.1224 - worth attempting to cluster genes, and then to use the re- 2.1225 - sults to cluster voxels. 2.1226 +Figure 7: Prototypes corresponding to sample gene 2.1227 +clusters, clustered by gradient similarity. Region bound- 2.1228 +aries for the region that most matches each prototype 2.1229 +are overlayed. Many areas are captured by clusters of genes 2.1230 + We also clustered the genes using gradient similarity 2.1231 + to see if the spatial regions defined by any clusters 2.1232 + matched known anatomical regions. Figure 7 shows, 2.1233 + for ten sample gene clusters, each cluster&#8217;s average 2.1234 + expression pattern, compared to a known anatomical 2.1235 + boundary. This suggests that it is worth attempting to 2.1236 + cluster genes, and then to use the results to cluster 2.1237 + pixels. 2.1238 The approach: what we plan to do 2.1239 Flatmap cortex and segment cortical layers 2.1240 - There are multiple ways to flatten 3-D data into 2-D. We 2.1241 - will compare mappings from manifolds to planes which at- 2.1242 - tempt to preserve size (such as the one used by Caret[7]) 2.1243 - with mappings which preserve angle (conformal maps). Our 2.1244 - method will include a statistical test that warns the user if 2.1245 -the assumption of 2-D structure seems to be wrong. 2.1246 -We have not yet made use of radial profiles. While the radial profiles may be used &#8220;raw&#8221;, for laminar structures like the 2.1247 -cortex another strategy is to group together voxels in the same cortical layer; each surface pixel would then be associated 2.1248 -with one expression level per gene per layer. We will develop a segmentation algorithm to automatically identify the layer 2.1249 -boundaries. 2.1250 + There are multiple ways to flatten 3-D data into 2-D. 2.1251 + We will compare mappings from manifolds to planes 2.1252 + which attempt to preserve size (such as the one used 2.1253 +by Caret[7]) with mappings which preserve angle (conformal maps). Our method will include a statistical test 2.1254 +that warns the user if the assumption of 2-D structure seems to be wrong. 2.1255 +We have not yet made use of radial profiles. While the radial profiles may be used &#8220;raw&#8221;, for laminar structures 2.1256 +like the cortex another strategy is to group together voxels in the same cortical layer; each surface pixel would 2.1257 +then be associated with one expression level per gene per layer. We will develop a segmentation algorithm to 2.1258 +automatically identify the layer boundaries. 2.1259 Develop algorithms that find genetic markers for anatomical regions 2.1260 -We will develop scoring methods for evaluating how good individual genes are at marking areas. We will compare pointwise, 2.1261 -geometric, and information-theoretic measures. We already developed one entirely new scoring method (gradient similarity), 2.1262 -but we may develop more. Scoring measures that we will explore will include the L1 norm, correlation, expression energy 2.1263 -ratio, conditional entropy, gradient similarity, Jaccard similarity, Dice similarity, Hough transform, and statistical tests such 2.1264 -as Student&#8217;s t-test, and the Mann-Whitney U test (a non-parametric test). In addition, any classifier induces a scoring 2.1265 -measure on genes by taking the prediction error when using that gene to predict the target. 2.1266 -Using some combination of these measures, we will develop a procedure to find single marker genes for anatomical regions: 2.1267 -for each cortical area, we will rank the genes by their ability to delineate each area. We will quantitatively compare the list 2.1268 -of single genes generated by our method to the lists generated by previous methods which are mentioned in Aim 1 Related 2.1269 -Work. 2.1270 -Some cortical areas have no single marker genes but can be identified by combinatorial coding. This requires multivariate 2.1271 -scoring measures and feature selection procedures. Many of the measures, such as expression energy, gradient similarity, 2.1272 -Jaccard, Dice, Hough, Student&#8217;s t, and Mann-Whitney U are univariate. We will extend these scoring measures for use 2.1273 -in multivariate feature selection, that is, for scoring how well combinations of genes, rather than individual genes, can 2.1274 -distinguish a target area. There are existing multivariate forms of some of the univariate scoring measures, for example, 2.1275 -Hotelling&#8217;s T-square is a multivariate analog of Student&#8217;s t. 2.1276 -We will develop a feature selection procedure for choosing the best small set of marker genes for a given anatomical 2.1277 -area. In addition to using the scoring measures that we develop, we will also explore (a) feature selection using a stepwise 2.1278 -wrapper over &#8220;vanilla&#8221; classifiers such as logistic regression, (b) supervised learning methods such as decision trees which 2.1279 -incrementally/greedily combine single gene markers into sets, and (c) supervised learning methods which use soft constraints 2.1280 -to minimize number of features used, such as sparse support vector machines. 2.1281 -Since errors of displacement and of shape may cause genes and target areas to match less than they should, we will 2.1282 -consider the robustness of feature selection methods in the presence of error. Some of these methods, such as the Hough 2.1283 -transform, are designed to be resistant in the presence of error, but many are not. We will consider extensions to scoring 2.1284 -measures that may improve their robustness; for example, a wrapper that runs a scoring method on small displacements 2.1285 -and distortions of the data adds robustness to registration error at the expense of computation time. 2.1286 -An area may be difficult to identify because the boundaries are misdrawn in the atlas, or because the shape of the natural 2.1287 -domain of gene expression corresponding to the area is different from the shape of the area as recognized by anatomists. 2.1288 -We will extend our procedure to handle difficult areas by combining areas or redrawing their boundaries. We will develop 2.1289 -extensions to our procedure which (a) detect when a difficult area could be fit if its boundary were redrawn slightly, and (b) 2.1290 -detect when a difficult area could be combined with adjacent areas to create a larger area which can be fit. 2.1291 -A future publication on the method that we develop in Aim 1 will review the scoring measures and quantitatively compare 2.1292 -their performance in order to provide a foundation for future research of methods of marker gene finding. We will measure 2.1293 -the robustness of the scoring measures as well as their absolute performance on our dataset. 2.1294 -Classifiers 2.1295 -We will explore and compare different classifiers. As noted above, this activity is not separate from the previous one, 2.1296 -because some supervised learning algorithms include feature selection, and any classifier can be combined with a stepwise 2.1297 -wrapper for use as a feature selection method. We will explore logistic regression (including spatial models[15]), decision 2.1298 -trees20 , sparse SVMs, generative mixture models (including naive bayes), kernel density estimation, instance-based learning 2.1299 -methods (such as k-nearest neighbor), genetic algorithms, and artificial neural networks. 2.1300 -Application to cortical areas 2.1301 -# confirm with EMAGE, GeneAtlas, GENSAT, etc, to fight overfitting, two hemis 2.1302 +Scoring measures and feature selection We will develop scoring methods for evaluating how good individual 2.1303 +genes are at marking areas. We will compare pointwise, geometric, and information-theoretic measures. We 2.1304 +already developed one entirely new scoring method (gradient similarity), but we may develop more. Scoring 2.1305 +measures that we will explore will include the L1 norm, correlation, expression energy ratio, conditional entropy, 2.1306 +gradient similarity, Jaccard similarity, Dice similarity, Hough transform, and statistical tests such as Student&#8217;s t- 2.1307 +test, and the Mann-Whitney U test (a non-parametric test). In addition, any classifier induces a scoring measure 2.1308 +on genes by taking the prediction error when using that gene to predict the target. 2.1309 +Using some combination of these measures, we will develop a procedure to find single marker genes for 2.1310 +anatomical regions: for each cortical area, we will rank the genes by their ability to delineate each area. We 2.1311 +will quantitatively compare the list of single genes generated by our method to the lists generated by previous 2.1312 +methods which are mentioned in Aim 1 Related Work. 2.1313 +Some cortical areas have no single marker genes but can be identified by combinatorial coding. This requires 2.1314 +multivariate scoring measures and feature selection procedures. Many of the measures, such as expression 2.1315 +energy, gradient similarity, Jaccard, Dice, Hough, Student&#8217;s t, and Mann-Whitney U are univariate. We will extend 2.1316 +these scoring measures for use in multivariate feature selection, that is, for scoring how well combinations of 2.1317 +genes, rather than individual genes, can distinguish a target area. There are existing multivariate forms of some 2.1318 +of the univariate scoring measures, for example, Hotelling&#8217;s T-square is a multivariate analog of Student&#8217;s t. 2.1319 +We will develop a feature selection procedure for choosing the best small set of marker genes for a given 2.1320 +anatomical area. In addition to using the scoring measures that we develop, we will also explore (a) feature 2.1321 +selection using a stepwise wrapper over &#8220;vanilla&#8221; classifiers such as logistic regression, (b) supervised learning 2.1322 +methods such as decision trees which incrementally/greedily combine single gene markers into sets, and (c) 2.1323 +supervised learning methods which use soft constraints to minimize number of features used, such as sparse 2.1324 +support vector machines. 2.1325 +Since errors of displacement and of shape may cause genes and target areas to match less than they should, 2.1326 +we will consider the robustness of feature selection methods in the presence of error. Some of these methods, 2.1327 +such as the Hough transform, are designed to be resistant in the presence of error, but many are not. We will 2.1328 +consider extensions to scoring measures that may improve their robustness; for example, a wrapper that runs a 2.1329 +scoring method on small displacements and distortions of the data adds robustness to registration error at the 2.1330 +expense of computation time. 2.1331 +An area may be difficult to identify because the boundaries are misdrawn in the atlas, or because the shape 2.1332 +of the natural domain of gene expression corresponding to the area is different from the shape of the area as 2.1333 +recognized by anatomists. We will extend our procedure to handle difficult areas by combining areas or redrawing 2.1334 +their boundaries. We will develop extensions to our procedure which (a) detect when a difficult area could be 2.1335 +fit if its boundary were redrawn slightly20, and (b) detect when a difficult area could be combined with adjacent 2.1336 +areas to create a larger area which can be fit. 2.1337 +A future publication on the method that we develop in Aim 1 will review the scoring measures and quantita- 2.1338 +tively compare their performance in order to provide a foundation for future research of methods of marker gene 2.1339 +finding. We will measure the robustness of the scoring measures as well as their absolute performance on our 2.1340 +dataset. 2.1341 +Classifiers We will explore and compare different classifiers. As noted above, this activity is not separate 2.1342 +from the previous one, because some supervised learning algorithms include feature selection, and any clas- 2.1343 +sifier can be combined with a stepwise wrapper for use as a feature selection method. We will explore logistic 2.1344 +regression (including spatial models[16]), decision trees21, sparse SVMs, generative mixture models (including 2.1345 +naive bayes), kernel density estimation, instance-based learning methods (such as k-nearest neighbor), genetic 2.1346 +algorithms, and artificial neural networks. 2.1347 Develop algorithms to suggest a division of a structure into anatomical parts 2.1348 -1.Explore dimensionality reduction algorithms applied to pixels: including TODO 2.1349 -2.Explore dimensionality reduction algorithms applied to genes: including TODO 2.1350 -3.Explore clustering algorithms applied to pixels: including TODO 2.1351 -4.Explore clustering algorithms applied to genes: including gene shaving[9], TODO 2.1352 -5.Develop an algorithm to use dimensionality reduction and/or hierarchial clustering to create anatomical maps 2.1353 -6.Run this algorithm on the cortex: present a hierarchial, genoarchitectonic map of the cortex 2.1354 -# Linear discriminant analysis 2.1355 -# jbt, coclustering 2.1356 -# self-organizing map 2.1357 -# Linear discriminant analysis 2.1358 -# compare using clustering scores 2.1359 -# multivariate gradient similarity 2.1360 -# deep belief nets 2.1361 -Apply these algorithms to the cortex 2.1362 -Using the methods developed in Aim 1, we will present, for each cortical area, a short list of markers to identify that 2.1363 -area; and we will also present lists of &#8220;panels&#8221; of genes that can be used to delineate many areas at once. Using the methods 2.1364 -developed in Aim 2, we will present one or more hierarchial cortical maps. We will identify and explain how the statistical 2.1365 -structure in the gene expression data led to any unexpected or interesting features of these maps, and we will provide 2.1366 -biological hypotheses to interpret any new cortical areas, or groupings of areas, which are discovered. 2.1367 +Explore dimensionality reduction on gene expression profiles We have already described the application 2.1368 +of ten dimensionality reduction algorithms for the purpose of replacing the gene expression profiles, which are 2.1369 +vectors of about 4000 gene expression levels, with a smaller number of features. We plan to further explore 2.1370 +and interpret these results, as well as to apply other unsupervised learning algorithms, including independent 2.1371 +components analysis, self-organizing maps, and generative models such as deep Boltzmann machines. We 2.1372 +will explore ways to quantitatively compare the relevance of the different dimensionality reduction methods for 2.1373 +identifying cortical areal boundaries. 2.1374 +Explore dimensionality reduction on pixels Instead of applying dimensionality reduction to the gene ex- 2.1375 _________________________________________ 2.1376 - 20Actually, we have already begun to explore decision trees. For each cortical area, we have used the C4.5 algorithm to find a decision tree for 2.1377 -that area. We achieved good classification accuracy on our training set, but the number of genes that appeared in each tree was too large. We 2.1378 -plan to implement a pruning procedure to generate trees that use fewer genes. 2.1379 + 20Not just any redrawing is acceptable, only those which appear to be justified as a natural spatial domain of gene expression by 2.1380 +multiple sources of evidence. Interestingly, the need to detect &#8220;natural spatial domains of gene expression&#8221; in a data-driven fashion 2.1381 +means that the methods of Aim 2 might be useful in achieving Aim 1, as well &#8211; particularly discriminative dimensionality reduction. 2.1382 + 21Actually, we have already begun to explore decision trees. For each cortical area, we have used the C4.5 algorithm to find a decision 2.1383 +tree for that area. We achieved good classification accuracy on our training set, but the number of genes that appeared in each tree was 2.1384 +too large. We plan to implement a pruning procedure to generate trees that use fewer genes. 2.1385 +pression profiles, the same techniques can be applied instead to the pixels22. It is possible that the features 2.1386 +generated in this way by some dimensionality reduction techniques will directly correspond to interesting spatial 2.1387 +regions. 2.1388 +Explore clustering and segmentation algorithms on pixels We will explore clustering and segmenta- 2.1389 +tion algorithms in order to segment the pixels into regions. We will explore k-means, spectral clustering, gene 2.1390 +shaving[9], recursive division clustering, multivariate generalizations of edge detectors, multivariate generaliza- 2.1391 +tions of watershed transformations, region growing, active contours, graph partitioning methods, and recursive 2.1392 +agglomerative clustering with various linkage functions. These methods can be combined with dimensionality 2.1393 +reduction. 2.1394 +Explore clustering on genes We have already shown that the procedure of clustering genes according to 2.1395 +gradient similarity, and then creating an averaged prototype of each cluster&#8217;s expression pattern, yields some 2.1396 +spatial patterns which match cortical areas. We will further explore the clustering of genes. 2.1397 +In addition to using the cluster expression prototypes directly to identify spatial regions, this might be useful 2.1398 +as a component of dimensionality reduction. For example, one could imagine clustering similar genes and then 2.1399 +replacing their expression levels with a single average expression level, thereby removing some redundancy from 2.1400 +the gene expression profiles. One could then perform clustering on pixels (possibly after a second dimensionality 2.1401 +reduction step) in order to identify spatial regions. It remains to be seen whether removal of redundancy would 2.1402 +help or hurt the ultimate goal of identifying interesting spatial regions. 2.1403 +Explore co-clustering There are some algorithms which simultaineously incorporate clustering on instances 2.1404 +and on features (in our case, genes and pixels), for example, IRM[11]. These are called co-clustering or biclus- 2.1405 +tering algorithms. 2.1406 +Quantitatively compare different methods In order to tell which method is best for genomic anatomy, for 2.1407 +each experimental method we will compare the cortical map found by unsupervised learning to a cortical map 2.1408 +derived from the Allen Reference Atlas. In order to compare the experimental clustering with the reference 2.1409 +clustering, we will explore various quantitative metrics that purport to measure how similar two clusterings are, 2.1410 +such as Jaccard, Rand index, Fowlkes-Mallows, variation of information, Larsen, Van Dongen, and others. 2.1411 +Discriminative dimensionality reduction In addition to using a purely data-driven approach to identify 2.1412 +spatial regions, it might be useful to see how well the known regions can be reconstructed from a small number 2.1413 +of features, even if those features are chosen by using knowledge of the regions. For example, linear discriminant 2.1414 +analysis could be used as a dimensionality reduction technique in order to identify a few features which are the 2.1415 +best linear summary of gene expression profiles for the purpose of discriminating between regions. This reduced 2.1416 +feature set could then be used to cluster pixels into regions. Perhaps the resulting clusters will be similar to the 2.1417 +reference atlas, yet more faithful to natural spatial domains of gene expression than the reference atlas is. 2.1418 +Apply the new methods to the cortex 2.1419 +Using the methods developed in Aim 1, we will present, for each cortical area, a short list of markers to identify 2.1420 +that area; and we will also present lists of &#8220;panels&#8221; of genes that can be used to delineate many areas at once. 2.1421 +Because in most cases the ABA coronal dataset only contains one ISH per gene, it is possible for an unrelated 2.1422 +combination of genes to seem to identify an area when in fact it is only coincidence. There are two ways we will 2.1423 +validate our marker genes to guard against this. First, we will confirm that putative combinations of marker genes 2.1424 +express the same pattern in both hemispheres. Second, we will manually validate our final results on other gene 2.1425 +expression datasets such as EMAGE, GeneAtlas, and GENSAT. 2.1426 +Using the methods developed in Aim 2, we will present one or more hierarchial cortical maps. We will identify 2.1427 +and explain how the statistical structure in the gene expression data led to any unexpected or interesting features 2.1428 +_________________________________________ 2.1429 + 22Consider a matrix whose rows represent pixel locations, and whose columns represent genes. An entry in this matrix represents the 2.1430 +gene expression level at a given pixel. One can look at this matrix as a collection of pixels, each corresponding to a vector of many gene 2.1431 +expression levels; or one can look at it as a collection of genes, each corresponding to a vector giving that gene&#8217;s expression at each 2.1432 +pixel. Similarly, dimensionality reduction can be used to replace a large number of genes with a small number of features, or it can be 2.1433 +used to replace a large number of pixels with a small number of features. 2.1434 +of these maps, and we will provide biological hypotheses to interpret any new cortical areas, or groupings of 2.1435 +areas, which are discovered. 2.1436 Timeline and milestones 2.1437 Finding marker genes 2.1438 -&#x2219;September-November 2009: Develop an automated mechanism for segmenting the cortical voxels into layers 2.1439 -&#x2219;November 2009 (milestone): Have completed construction of a flatmapped, cortical dataset with information for each 2.1440 -layer 2.1441 -&#x2219;October 2009-April 2010: Develop scoring methods and to test them in various supervised learning frameworks. Also 2.1442 -test out various dimensionality reduction schemes in combination with supervised learning. create or extend supervised 2.1443 -learning frameworks which use multivariate versions of the best scoring methods. 2.1444 -&#x2219;January 2010 (milestone): Submit a publication on single marker genes for cortical areas 2.1445 -&#x2219;February-July 2010: Continue to develop scoring methods and supervised learning frameworks. Explore the best way 2.1446 -to integrate radial profiles with supervised learning. Explore the best way to make supervised learning techniques 2.1447 -robust against incorrect labels (i.e. when the areas drawn on the input cortical map are slightly off). Quantitatively 2.1448 -compare the performance of different supervised learning techniques. Validate marker genes found in the ABA dataset 2.1449 -by checking against other gene expression datasets. Create documentation and unit tests for software toolbox for Aim 2.1450 -1. Respond to user bug reports for Aim 1 software toolbox. 2.1451 -&#x2219;June 2010 (milestone): Submit a paper describing a method fulfilling Aim 1. Release toolbox. 2.1452 -&#x2219;July 2010 (milestone): Submit a paper describing combinations of marker genes for each cortical area, and a small 2.1453 -number of marker genes that can, in combination, define most of the areas at once 2.1454 +September-November 2009: Develop an automated mechanism for segmenting the cortical voxels into layers 2.1455 +November 2009 (milestone): Have completed construction of a flatmapped, cortical dataset with information 2.1456 +for each layer 2.1457 +October 2009-April 2010: Develop scoring methods and to test them in various supervised learning frameworks. 2.1458 +Also test out various dimensionality reduction schemes in combination with supervised learning. create or extend 2.1459 +supervised learning frameworks which use multivariate versions of the best scoring methods. 2.1460 +January 2010 (milestone): Submit a publication on single marker genes for cortical areas 2.1461 +February-July 2010: Continue to develop scoring methods and supervised learning frameworks. Explore the 2.1462 +best way to integrate radial profiles with supervised learning. Explore the best way to make supervised learning 2.1463 +techniques robust against incorrect labels (i.e. when the areas drawn on the input cortical map are slightly 2.1464 +off). Quantitatively compare the performance of different supervised learning techniques. Validate marker genes 2.1465 +found in the ABA dataset by checking against other gene expression datasets. Create documentation and unit 2.1466 +tests for software toolbox for Aim 1. Respond to user bug reports for Aim 1 software toolbox. 2.1467 +June 2010 (milestone): Submit a paper describing a method fulfilling Aim 1. Release toolbox. 2.1468 +July 2010 (milestone): Submit a paper describing combinations of marker genes for each cortical area, and a 2.1469 +small number of marker genes that can, in combination, define most of the areas at once 2.1470 Revealing new ways to parcellate a structure into regions 2.1471 -&#x2219;June 2010-March 2011: Explore dimensionality reduction algorithms for Aim 2. Explore standard hierarchial clus- 2.1472 -tering algorithms, used in combination with dimensionality reduction, for Aim 2. Explore co-clustering algorithms. 2.1473 -Think about how radial profile information can be used for Aim 2. Adapt clustering algorithms to use radial profile 2.1474 -information. Quantitatively compare the performance of different dimensionality reduction and clustering techniques. 2.1475 -Quantitatively compare the value of different flatmapping methods and ways of representing radial profiles. 2.1476 -&#x2219;March 2011 (milestone): Submit a paper describing a method fulfilling Aim 2. Release toolbox. 2.1477 -&#x2219;February-May 2011: Using the methods developed for Aim 2, explore the genomic anatomy of the cortex. If new ways 2.1478 -of organizing the cortex into areas are discovered, read the literature and talk to people to learn about research related 2.1479 -to interpreting our results. Create documentation and unit tests for software toolbox for Aim 2. Respond to user bug 2.1480 -reports for Aim 2 software toolbox. 2.1481 -&#x2219;May 2011 (milestone): Submit a paper on the genomic anatomy of the cortex, using the methods developed in Aim 2 2.1482 -&#x2219;May-August 2011: Revisit Aim 1 to see if what was learned during Aim 2 can improve the methods for Aim 1. Follow 2.1483 -up on responses to our papers. Possibly submit another paper. 2.1484 +June 2010-March 2011: Explore dimensionality reduction algorithms for Aim 2. Explore standard hierarchial 2.1485 +clustering algorithms, used in combination with dimensionality reduction, for Aim 2. Explore co-clustering algo- 2.1486 +rithms. Think about how radial profile information can be used for Aim 2. Adapt clustering algorithms to use radial 2.1487 +profile information. Quantitatively compare the performance of different dimensionality reduction and clustering 2.1488 +techniques. Quantitatively compare the value of different flatmapping methods and ways of representing radial 2.1489 +profiles. 2.1490 +March 2011 (milestone): Submit a paper describing a method fulfilling Aim 2. Release toolbox. 2.1491 +February-May 2011: Using the methods developed for Aim 2, explore the genomic anatomy of the cortex. If 2.1492 +new ways of organizing the cortex into areas are discovered, read the literature and talk to people to learn about 2.1493 +research related to interpreting our results. Create documentation and unit tests for software toolbox for Aim 2. 2.1494 +Respond to user bug reports for Aim 2 software toolbox. 2.1495 +May 2011 (milestone): Submit a paper on the genomic anatomy of the cortex, using the methods developed in 2.1496 +Aim 2 2.1497 +May-August 2011: Revisit Aim 1 to see if what was learned during Aim 2 can improve the methods for Aim 1. 2.1498 +Follow up on responses to our papers. Possibly submit another paper. 2.1499 Bibliography &amp; References Cited 2.1500 -[1]Chris Adamson, Leigh Johnston, Terrie Inder, Sandra Rees, Iven Mareels, and Gary Egan. A Tracking Approach to 2.1501 -Parcellation of the Cerebral Cortex, volume Volume 3749/2005 of Lecture Notes in Computer Science, pages 294&#8211;301. 2.1502 -Springer Berlin / Heidelberg, 2005. 2.1503 -[2]J. Annese, A. Pitiot, I. D. Dinov, and A. W. Toga. A myelo-architectonic method for the structural classification of 2.1504 -cortical areas. NeuroImage, 21(1):15&#8211;26, 2004. 2.1505 -[3]Tanya Barrett, Dennis B. Troup, Stephen E. Wilhite, Pierre Ledoux, Dmitry Rudnev, Carlos Evangelista, Irene F. 2.1506 -Kim, Alexandra Soboleva, Maxim Tomashevsky, and Ron Edgar. NCBI GEO: mining tens of millions of expression 2.1507 -profiles&#8211;database and tools update. Nucl. Acids Res., 35(suppl_1):D760&#8211;765, 2007. 2.1508 -[4]George W. Bell, Tatiana A. Yatskievych, and Parker B. Antin. GEISHA, a whole-mount in situ hybridization gene 2.1509 -expression screen in chicken embryos. Developmental Dynamics, 229(3):677&#8211;687, 2004. 2.1510 -[5]James P Carson, Tao Ju, Hui-Chen Lu, Christina Thaller, Mei Xu, Sarah L Pallas, Michael C Crair, Joe Warren, Wah 2.1511 -Chiu, and Gregor Eichele. A digital atlas to characterize the mouse brain transcriptome. PLoS Comput Biol, 1(4):e41, 2.1512 -2005. 2.1513 -[6]Mark H. Chin, Alex B. Geng, Arshad H. Khan, Wei-Jun Qian, Vladislav A. Petyuk, Jyl Boline, Shawn Levy, Arthur W. 2.1514 -Toga, Richard D. Smith, Richard M. Leahy, and Desmond J. Smith. A genome-scale map of expression for a mouse 2.1515 -brain section obtained using voxelation. Physiol. Genomics, 30(3):313&#8211;321, August 2007. 2.1516 -[7]D C Van Essen, H A Drury, J Dickson, J Harwell, D Hanlon, and C H Anderson. An integrated software suite for surface- 2.1517 -based analyses of cerebral cortex. Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association: JAMIA, 8(5):443&#8211;59, 2001. 2.1518 -PMID: 11522765. 2.1519 -[8]Shiaoching Gong, Chen Zheng, Martin L. Doughty, Kasia Losos, Nicholas Didkovsky, Uta B. Schambra, Norma J. 2.1520 -Nowak, Alexandra Joyner, Gabrielle Leblanc, Mary E. Hatten, and Nathaniel Heintz. A gene expression atlas of the 2.1521 -central nervous system based on bacterial artificial chromosomes. Nature, 425(6961):917&#8211;925, October 2003. 2.1522 -[9]Trevor Hastie, Robert Tibshirani, Michael Eisen, Ash Alizadeh, Ronald Levy, Louis Staudt, Wing Chan, David Botstein, 2.1523 -and Patrick Brown. &#8217;Gene shaving&#8217; as a method for identifying distinct sets of genes with similar expression patterns. 2.1524 -Genome Biology, 1(2):research0003.1&#8211;research0003.21, 2000. 2.1525 -[10]Jano Hemert and Richard Baldock. Matching Spatial Regions with Combinations of Interacting Gene Expression Pat- 2.1526 -terns, volume 13 of Communications in Computer and Information Science, pages 347&#8211;361. Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2.1527 -2008. 2.1528 -[11]F. Kruggel, M. K. Brckner, Th. Arendt, C. J. Wiggins, and D. Y. von Cramon. Analyzing the neocortical fine-structure. 2.1529 -Medical Image Analysis, 7(3):251&#8211;264, September 2003. 2.1530 -[12]Erh-Fang Lee, Jyl Boline, and Arthur W. Toga. A High-Resolution anatomical framework of the neonatal mouse brain 2.1531 -for managing gene expression data. Frontiers in Neuroinformatics, 1:6, 2007. PMC2525996. 2.1532 -[13]Susan Magdaleno, Patricia Jensen, Craig L. Brumwell, Anna Seal, Karen Lehman, Andrew Asbury, Tony Cheung, 2.1533 -Tommie Cornelius, Diana M. Batten, Christopher Eden, Shannon M. Norland, Dennis S. Rice, Nilesh Dosooye, Sundeep 2.1534 -Shakya, Perdeep Mehta, and Tom Curran. BGEM: an in situ hybridization database of gene expression in the embryonic 2.1535 -and adult mouse nervous system. PLoS Biology, 4(4):e86 EP &#8211;, April 2006. 2.1536 -[14]Lydia Ng, Amy Bernard, Chris Lau, Caroline C Overly, Hong-Wei Dong, Chihchau Kuan, Sayan Pathak, Susan M 2.1537 -Sunkin, Chinh Dang, Jason W Bohland, Hemant Bokil, Partha P Mitra, Luis Puelles, John Hohmann, David J Anderson, 2.1538 -Ed S Lein, Allan R Jones, and Michael Hawrylycz. An anatomic gene expression atlas of the adult mouse brain. Nat 2.1539 -Neurosci, 12(3):356&#8211;362, March 2009. 2.1540 -[15]Christopher J. Paciorek. Computational techniques for spatial logistic regression with large data sets. Computational 2.1541 -Statistics &amp; Data Analysis, 51(8):3631&#8211;3653, May 2007. 2.1542 -[16]George Paxinos and Keith B.J. Franklin. The Mouse Brain in Stereotaxic Coordinates. Academic Press, 2 edition, July 2.1543 -2001. 2.1544 -[17]A. Schleicher, N. Palomero-Gallagher, P. Morosan, S. Eickhoff, T. Kowalski, K. Vos, K. Amunts, and K. Zilles. Quanti- 2.1545 -tative architectural analysis: a new approach to cortical mapping. Anatomy and Embryology, 210(5):373&#8211;386, December 2.1546 -2005. 2.1547 -[18]Oliver Schmitt, Lars Hmke, and Lutz Dmbgen. Detection of cortical transition regions utilizing statistical analyses of 2.1548 -excess masses. NeuroImage, 19(1):42&#8211;63, May 2003. 2.1549 -[19]Constance M. Smith, Jacqueline H. Finger, Terry F. Hayamizu, Ingeborg J. McCright, Janan T. Eppig, James A. 2.1550 -Kadin, Joel E. Richardson, and Martin Ringwald. The mouse gene expression database (GXD): 2007 update. Nucl. 2.1551 -Acids Res., 35(suppl_1):D618&#8211;623, 2007. 2.1552 -[20]Judy Sprague, Leyla Bayraktaroglu, Dave Clements, Tom Conlin, David Fashena, Ken Frazer, Melissa Haendel, Dou- 2.1553 -glas G Howe, Prita Mani, Sridhar Ramachandran, Kevin Schaper, Erik Segerdell, Peiran Song, Brock Sprunger, Sierra 2.1554 -Taylor, Ceri E Van Slyke, and Monte Westerfield. The zebrafish information network: the zebrafish model organism 2.1555 -database. Nucleic Acids Research, 34(Database issue):D581&#8211;5, 2006. PMID: 16381936. 2.1556 -[21]Larry Swanson. Brain Maps: Structure of the Rat Brain. Academic Press, 3 edition, November 2003. 2.1557 -[22]Carol L. Thompson, Sayan D. Pathak, Andreas Jeromin, Lydia L. Ng, Cameron R. MacPherson, Marty T. Mortrud, 2.1558 -Allison Cusick, Zackery L. Riley, Susan M. Sunkin, Amy Bernard, Ralph B. Puchalski, Fred H. Gage, Allan R. Jones, 2.1559 -Vladimir B. Bajic, Michael J. Hawrylycz, and Ed S. Lein. Genomic anatomy of the hippocampus. Neuron, 60(6):1010&#8211; 2.1560 -1021, December 2008. 2.1561 -[23]Pavel Tomancak, Amy Beaton, Richard Weiszmann, Elaine Kwan, ShengQiang Shu, Suzanna E Lewis, Stephen 2.1562 -Richards, Michael Ashburner, Volker Hartenstein, Susan E Celniker, and Gerald M Rubin. Systematic determina- 2.1563 -tion of patterns of gene expression during drosophila embryogenesis. Genome Biology, 3(12):research008818814, 2002. 2.1564 -PMC151190. 2.1565 -[24]Jano van Hemert and Richard Baldock. Mining Spatial Gene Expression Data for Association Rules, volume 4414/2007 2.1566 -of Lecture Notes in Computer Science, pages 66&#8211;76. Springer Berlin / Heidelberg, 2007. 2.1567 -[25]Shanmugasundaram Venkataraman, Peter Stevenson, Yiya Yang, Lorna Richardson, Nicholas Burton, Thomas P. Perry, 2.1568 -Paul Smith, Richard A. Baldock, Duncan R. Davidson, and Jeffrey H. Christiansen. EMAGE edinburgh mouse atlas 2.1569 -of gene expression: 2008 update. Nucl. Acids Res., 36(suppl_1):D860&#8211;865, 2008. 2.1570 -[26]Axel Visel, Christina Thaller, and Gregor Eichele. GenePaint.org: an atlas of gene expression patterns in the mouse 2.1571 -embryo. Nucl. Acids Res., 32(suppl_1):D552&#8211;556, 2004. 2.1572 -[27]Robert H Waterston, Kerstin Lindblad-Toh, Ewan Birney, Jane Rogers, Josep F Abril, Pankaj Agarwal, Richa Agar- 2.1573 -wala, Rachel Ainscough, Marina Alexandersson, Peter An, Stylianos E Antonarakis, John Attwood, Robert Baertsch, 2.1574 -Jonathon Bailey, Karen Barlow, Stephan Beck, Eric Berry, Bruce Birren, Toby Bloom, Peer Bork, Marc Botcherby, 2.1575 -Nicolas Bray, Michael R Brent, Daniel G Brown, Stephen D Brown, Carol Bult, John Burton, Jonathan Butler, 2.1576 -Robert D Campbell, Piero Carninci, Simon Cawley, Francesca Chiaromonte, Asif T Chinwalla, Deanna M Church, 2.1577 -Michele Clamp, Christopher Clee, Francis S Collins, Lisa L Cook, Richard R Copley, Alan Coulson, Olivier Couronne, 2.1578 -James Cuff, Val Curwen, Tim Cutts, Mark Daly, Robert David, Joy Davies, Kimberly D Delehaunty, Justin Deri, 2.1579 -Emmanouil T Dermitzakis, Colin Dewey, Nicholas J Dickens, Mark Diekhans, Sheila Dodge, Inna Dubchak, Diane M 2.1580 -Dunn, Sean R Eddy, Laura Elnitski, Richard D Emes, Pallavi Eswara, Eduardo Eyras, Adam Felsenfeld, Ginger A 2.1581 -Fewell, Paul Flicek, Karen Foley, Wayne N Frankel, Lucinda A Fulton, Robert S Fulton, Terrence S Furey, Diane Gage, 2.1582 -Richard A Gibbs, Gustavo Glusman, Sante Gnerre, Nick Goldman, Leo Goodstadt, Darren Grafham, Tina A Graves, 2.1583 -Eric D Green, Simon Gregory, Roderic Guig, Mark Guyer, Ross C Hardison, David Haussler, Yoshihide Hayashizaki, 2.1584 -LaDeana W Hillier, Angela Hinrichs, Wratko Hlavina, Timothy Holzer, Fan Hsu, Axin Hua, Tim Hubbard, Adrienne 2.1585 -Hunt, Ian Jackson, David B Jaffe, L Steven Johnson, Matthew Jones, Thomas A Jones, Ann Joy, Michael Kamal, 2.1586 -Elinor K Karlsson, Donna Karolchik, Arkadiusz Kasprzyk, Jun Kawai, Evan Keibler, Cristyn Kells, W James Kent, 2.1587 -Andrew Kirby, Diana L Kolbe, Ian Korf, Raju S Kucherlapati, Edward J Kulbokas, David Kulp, Tom Landers, J P 2.1588 -Leger, Steven Leonard, Ivica Letunic, Rosie Levine, Jia Li, Ming Li, Christine Lloyd, Susan Lucas, Bin Ma, Donna R 2.1589 -Maglott, Elaine R Mardis, Lucy Matthews, Evan Mauceli, John H Mayer, Megan McCarthy, W Richard McCombie, 2.1590 -Stuart McLaren, Kirsten McLay, John D McPherson, Jim Meldrim, Beverley Meredith, Jill P Mesirov, Webb Miller, 2.1591 -Tracie L Miner, Emmanuel Mongin, Kate T Montgomery, Michael Morgan, Richard Mott, James C Mullikin, Donna M 2.1592 -Muzny, William E Nash, Joanne O Nelson, Michael N Nhan, Robert Nicol, Zemin Ning, Chad Nusbaum, Michael J 2.1593 -O&#8217;Connor, Yasushi Okazaki, Karen Oliver, Emma Overton-Larty, Lior Pachter, Gens Parra, Kymberlie H Pepin, Jane 2.1594 -Peterson, Pavel Pevzner, Robert Plumb, Craig S Pohl, Alex Poliakov, Tracy C Ponce, Chris P Ponting, Simon Potter, 2.1595 -Michael Quail, Alexandre Reymond, Bruce A Roe, Krishna M Roskin, Edward M Rubin, Alistair G Rust, Ralph San- 2.1596 -tos, Victor Sapojnikov, Brian Schultz, Jrg Schultz, Matthias S Schwartz, Scott Schwartz, Carol Scott, Steven Seaman, 2.1597 -Steve Searle, Ted Sharpe, Andrew Sheridan, Ratna Shownkeen, Sarah Sims, Jonathan B Singer, Guy Slater, Arian 2.1598 -Smit, Douglas R Smith, Brian Spencer, Arne Stabenau, Nicole Stange-Thomann, Charles Sugnet, Mikita Suyama, 2.1599 -Glenn Tesler, Johanna Thompson, David Torrents, Evanne Trevaskis, John Tromp, Catherine Ucla, Abel Ureta-Vidal, 2.1600 -Jade P Vinson, Andrew C Von Niederhausern, Claire M Wade, Melanie Wall, Ryan J Weber, Robert B Weiss, Michael C 2.1601 -Wendl, Anthony P West, Kris Wetterstrand, Raymond Wheeler, Simon Whelan, Jamey Wierzbowski, David Willey, 2.1602 -Sophie Williams, Richard K Wilson, Eitan Winter, Kim C Worley, Dudley Wyman, Shan Yang, Shiaw-Pyng Yang, 2.1603 -Evgeny M Zdobnov, Michael C Zody, and Eric S Lander. Initial sequencing and comparative analysis of the mouse 2.1604 -genome. Nature, 420(6915):520&#8211;62, December 2002. PMID: 12466850. 2.1605 +[1]Chris Adamson, Leigh Johnston, Terrie Inder, Sandra Rees, Iven Mareels, and Gary Egan. A Tracking 2.1606 +Approach to Parcellation of the Cerebral Cortex, volume Volume 3749/2005 of Lecture Notes in Computer 2.1607 +Science, pages 294&#8211;301. Springer Berlin / Heidelberg, 2005. 2.1608 +[2]J. Annese, A. Pitiot, I. D. Dinov, and A. W. Toga. A myelo-architectonic method for the structural classification 2.1609 +of cortical areas. NeuroImage, 21(1):15&#8211;26, 2004. 2.1610 +[3]Tanya Barrett, Dennis B. Troup, Stephen E. Wilhite, Pierre Ledoux, Dmitry Rudnev, Carlos Evangelista, 2.1611 +Irene F. Kim, Alexandra Soboleva, Maxim Tomashevsky, and Ron Edgar. NCBI GEO: mining tens of millions 2.1612 +of expression profiles&#8211;database and tools update. Nucl. Acids Res., 35(suppl_1):D760&#8211;765, 2007. 2.1613 +[4]George W. Bell, Tatiana A. Yatskievych, and Parker B. Antin. GEISHA, a whole-mount in situ hybridization 2.1614 +gene expression screen in chicken embryos. Developmental Dynamics, 229(3):677&#8211;687, 2004. 2.1615 +[5]James P Carson, Tao Ju, Hui-Chen Lu, Christina Thaller, Mei Xu, Sarah L Pallas, Michael C Crair, Joe 2.1616 +Warren, Wah Chiu, and Gregor Eichele. A digital atlas to characterize the mouse brain transcriptome. 2.1617 +PLoS Comput Biol, 1(4):e41, 2005. 2.1618 +[6]Mark H. Chin, Alex B. Geng, Arshad H. Khan, Wei-Jun Qian, Vladislav A. Petyuk, Jyl Boline, Shawn Levy, 2.1619 +Arthur W. Toga, Richard D. Smith, Richard M. Leahy, and Desmond J. Smith. A genome-scale map of 2.1620 +expression for a mouse brain section obtained using voxelation. Physiol. Genomics, 30(3):313&#8211;321, August 2.1621 +2007. 2.1622 +[7]D C Van Essen, H A Drury, J Dickson, J Harwell, D Hanlon, and C H Anderson. An integrated software suite 2.1623 +for surface-based analyses of cerebral cortex. Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association: 2.1624 +JAMIA, 8(5):443&#8211;59, 2001. PMID: 11522765. 2.1625 +[8]Shiaoching Gong, Chen Zheng, Martin L. Doughty, Kasia Losos, Nicholas Didkovsky, Uta B. Scham- 2.1626 +bra, Norma J. Nowak, Alexandra Joyner, Gabrielle Leblanc, Mary E. Hatten, and Nathaniel Heintz. A 2.1627 +gene expression atlas of the central nervous system based on bacterial artificial chromosomes. Nature, 2.1628 +425(6961):917&#8211;925, October 2003. 2.1629 +[9]Trevor Hastie, Robert Tibshirani, Michael Eisen, Ash Alizadeh, Ronald Levy, Louis Staudt, Wing Chan, 2.1630 +David Botstein, and Patrick Brown. &#8217;Gene shaving&#8217; as a method for identifying distinct sets of genes with 2.1631 +similar expression patterns. Genome Biology, 1(2):research0003.1&#8211;research0003.21, 2000. 2.1632 +[10]Jano Hemert and Richard Baldock. Matching Spatial Regions with Combinations of Interacting Gene Ex- 2.1633 +pression Patterns, volume 13 of Communications in Computer and Information Science, pages 347&#8211;361. 2.1634 +Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2008. 2.1635 +[11]C Kemp, JB Tenenbaum, TL Griffiths, T Yamada, and N Ueda. Learning systems of concepts with an infinite 2.1636 +relational model. In AAAI, 2006. 2.1637 +[12]F. Kruggel, M. K. Brckner, Th. Arendt, C. J. Wiggins, and D. Y. von Cramon. Analyzing the neocortical 2.1638 +fine-structure. Medical Image Analysis, 7(3):251&#8211;264, September 2003. 2.1639 +[13]Erh-Fang Lee, Jyl Boline, and Arthur W. Toga. A High-Resolution anatomical framework of the neonatal 2.1640 +mouse brain for managing gene expression data. Frontiers in Neuroinformatics, 1:6, 2007. PMC2525996. 2.1641 +[14]Susan Magdaleno, Patricia Jensen, Craig L. Brumwell, Anna Seal, Karen Lehman, Andrew Asbury, Tony 2.1642 +Cheung, Tommie Cornelius, Diana M. Batten, Christopher Eden, Shannon M. Norland, Dennis S. Rice, 2.1643 +Nilesh Dosooye, Sundeep Shakya, Perdeep Mehta, and Tom Curran. BGEM: an in situ hybridization 2.1644 +database of gene expression in the embryonic and adult mouse nervous system. PLoS Biology, 4(4):e86 2.1645 +EP &#8211;, April 2006. 2.1646 +[15]Lydia Ng, Amy Bernard, Chris Lau, Caroline C Overly, Hong-Wei Dong, Chihchau Kuan, Sayan Pathak, Su- 2.1647 +san M Sunkin, Chinh Dang, Jason W Bohland, Hemant Bokil, Partha P Mitra, Luis Puelles, John Hohmann, 2.1648 +David J Anderson, Ed S Lein, Allan R Jones, and Michael Hawrylycz. An anatomic gene expression atlas 2.1649 +of the adult mouse brain. Nat Neurosci, 12(3):356&#8211;362, March 2009. 2.1650 +[16]Christopher J. Paciorek. Computational techniques for spatial logistic regression with large data sets. Com- 2.1651 +putational Statistics &amp; Data Analysis, 51(8):3631&#8211;3653, May 2007. 2.1652 +[17]George Paxinos and Keith B.J. Franklin. The Mouse Brain in Stereotaxic Coordinates. Academic Press, 2 2.1653 +edition, July 2001. 2.1654 +[18]A. Schleicher, N. Palomero-Gallagher, P. Morosan, S. Eickhoff, T. Kowalski, K. Vos, K. Amunts, and 2.1655 +K. Zilles. Quantitative architectural analysis: a new approach to cortical mapping. Anatomy and Em- 2.1656 +bryology, 210(5):373&#8211;386, December 2005. 2.1657 +[19]Oliver Schmitt, Lars Hmke, and Lutz Dmbgen. Detection of cortical transition regions utilizing statistical 2.1658 +analyses of excess masses. NeuroImage, 19(1):42&#8211;63, May 2003. 2.1659 +[20]Constance M. Smith, Jacqueline H. Finger, Terry F. Hayamizu, Ingeborg J. McCright, Janan T. Eppig, 2.1660 +James A. Kadin, Joel E. Richardson, and Martin Ringwald. The mouse gene expression database (GXD): 2.1661 +2007 update. Nucl. Acids Res., 35(suppl_1):D618&#8211;623, 2007. 2.1662 +[21]Judy Sprague, Leyla Bayraktaroglu, Dave Clements, Tom Conlin, David Fashena, Ken Frazer, Melissa 2.1663 +Haendel, Douglas G Howe, Prita Mani, Sridhar Ramachandran, Kevin Schaper, Erik Segerdell, Peiran 2.1664 +Song, Brock Sprunger, Sierra Taylor, Ceri E Van Slyke, and Monte Westerfield. The zebrafish information 2.1665 +network: the zebrafish model organism database. Nucleic Acids Research, 34(Database issue):D581&#8211;5, 2.1666 +2006. PMID: 16381936. 2.1667 +[22]Larry Swanson. Brain Maps: Structure of the Rat Brain. Academic Press, 3 edition, November 2003. 2.1668 +[23]Carol L. Thompson, Sayan D. Pathak, Andreas Jeromin, Lydia L. Ng, Cameron R. MacPherson, Marty T. 2.1669 +Mortrud, Allison Cusick, Zackery L. Riley, Susan M. Sunkin, Amy Bernard, Ralph B. Puchalski, Fred H. 2.1670 +Gage, Allan R. Jones, Vladimir B. Bajic, Michael J. Hawrylycz, and Ed S. Lein. Genomic anatomy of the 2.1671 +hippocampus. Neuron, 60(6):1010&#8211;1021, December 2008. 2.1672 +[24]Pavel Tomancak, Amy Beaton, Richard Weiszmann, Elaine Kwan, ShengQiang Shu, Suzanna E Lewis, 2.1673 +Stephen Richards, Michael Ashburner, Volker Hartenstein, Susan E Celniker, and Gerald M Rubin. Sys- 2.1674 +tematic determination of patterns of gene expression during drosophila embryogenesis. Genome Biology, 2.1675 +3(12):research008818814, 2002. PMC151190. 2.1676 +[25]Jano van Hemert and Richard Baldock. Mining Spatial Gene Expression Data for Association Rules, volume 2.1677 +4414/2007 of Lecture Notes in Computer Science, pages 66&#8211;76. Springer Berlin / Heidelberg, 2007. 2.1678 +[26]Shanmugasundaram Venkataraman, Peter Stevenson, Yiya Yang, Lorna Richardson, Nicholas Burton, 2.1679 +Thomas P. Perry, Paul Smith, Richard A. Baldock, Duncan R. Davidson, and Jeffrey H. Christiansen. 2.1680 +EMAGE edinburgh mouse atlas of gene expression: 2008 update. Nucl. Acids Res., 36(suppl_1):D860&#8211; 2.1681 +865, 2008. 2.1682 +[27]Axel Visel, Christina Thaller, and Gregor Eichele. GenePaint.org: an atlas of gene expression patterns in 2.1683 +the mouse embryo. Nucl. Acids Res., 32(suppl_1):D552&#8211;556, 2004. 2.1684 +[28]Robert H Waterston, Kerstin Lindblad-Toh, Ewan Birney, Jane Rogers, Josep F Abril, Pankaj Agarwal, Richa 2.1685 +Agarwala, Rachel Ainscough, Marina Alexandersson, Peter An, Stylianos E Antonarakis, John Attwood, 2.1686 +Robert Baertsch, Jonathon Bailey, Karen Barlow, Stephan Beck, Eric Berry, Bruce Birren, Toby Bloom, Peer 2.1687 +Bork, Marc Botcherby, Nicolas Bray, Michael R Brent, Daniel G Brown, Stephen D Brown, Carol Bult, John 2.1688 +Burton, Jonathan Butler, Robert D Campbell, Piero Carninci, Simon Cawley, Francesca Chiaromonte, Asif T 2.1689 +Chinwalla, Deanna M Church, Michele Clamp, Christopher Clee, Francis S Collins, Lisa L Cook, Richard R 2.1690 +Copley, Alan Coulson, Olivier Couronne, James Cuff, Val Curwen, Tim Cutts, Mark Daly, Robert David, Joy 2.1691 +Davies, Kimberly D Delehaunty, Justin Deri, Emmanouil T Dermitzakis, Colin Dewey, Nicholas J Dickens, 2.1692 +Mark Diekhans, Sheila Dodge, Inna Dubchak, Diane M Dunn, Sean R Eddy, Laura Elnitski, Richard D Emes, 2.1693 +Pallavi Eswara, Eduardo Eyras, Adam Felsenfeld, Ginger A Fewell, Paul Flicek, Karen Foley, Wayne N 2.1694 +Frankel, Lucinda A Fulton, Robert S Fulton, Terrence S Furey, Diane Gage, Richard A Gibbs, Gustavo 2.1695 +Glusman, Sante Gnerre, Nick Goldman, Leo Goodstadt, Darren Grafham, Tina A Graves, Eric D Green, 2.1696 +Simon Gregory, Roderic Guig, Mark Guyer, Ross C Hardison, David Haussler, Yoshihide Hayashizaki, 2.1697 +LaDeana W Hillier, Angela Hinrichs, Wratko Hlavina, Timothy Holzer, Fan Hsu, Axin Hua, Tim Hubbard, 2.1698 +Adrienne Hunt, Ian Jackson, David B Jaffe, L Steven Johnson, Matthew Jones, Thomas A Jones, Ann Joy, 2.1699 +Michael Kamal, Elinor K Karlsson, Donna Karolchik, Arkadiusz Kasprzyk, Jun Kawai, Evan Keibler, Cristyn 2.1700 +Kells, W James Kent, Andrew Kirby, Diana L Kolbe, Ian Korf, Raju S Kucherlapati, Edward J Kulbokas, David 2.1701 +Kulp, Tom Landers, J P Leger, Steven Leonard, Ivica Letunic, Rosie Levine, Jia Li, Ming Li, Christine Lloyd, 2.1702 +Susan Lucas, Bin Ma, Donna R Maglott, Elaine R Mardis, Lucy Matthews, Evan Mauceli, John H Mayer, 2.1703 +Megan McCarthy, W Richard McCombie, Stuart McLaren, Kirsten McLay, John D McPherson, Jim Meldrim, 2.1704 +Beverley Meredith, Jill P Mesirov, Webb Miller, Tracie L Miner, Emmanuel Mongin, Kate T Montgomery, 2.1705 +Michael Morgan, Richard Mott, James C Mullikin, Donna M Muzny, William E Nash, Joanne O Nelson, 2.1706 +Michael N Nhan, Robert Nicol, Zemin Ning, Chad Nusbaum, Michael J O&#8217;Connor, Yasushi Okazaki, Karen 2.1707 +Oliver, Emma Overton-Larty, Lior Pachter, Gens Parra, Kymberlie H Pepin, Jane Peterson, Pavel Pevzner, 2.1708 +Robert Plumb, Craig S Pohl, Alex Poliakov, Tracy C Ponce, Chris P Ponting, Simon Potter, Michael Quail, 2.1709 +Alexandre Reymond, Bruce A Roe, Krishna M Roskin, Edward M Rubin, Alistair G Rust, Ralph Santos, 2.1710 +Victor Sapojnikov, Brian Schultz, Jrg Schultz, Matthias S Schwartz, Scott Schwartz, Carol Scott, Steven 2.1711 +Seaman, Steve Searle, Ted Sharpe, Andrew Sheridan, Ratna Shownkeen, Sarah Sims, Jonathan B Singer, 2.1712 +Guy Slater, Arian Smit, Douglas R Smith, Brian Spencer, Arne Stabenau, Nicole Stange-Thomann, Charles 2.1713 +Sugnet, Mikita Suyama, Glenn Tesler, Johanna Thompson, David Torrents, Evanne Trevaskis, John Tromp, 2.1714 +Catherine Ucla, Abel Ureta-Vidal, Jade P Vinson, Andrew C Von Niederhausern, Claire M Wade, Melanie 2.1715 +Wall, Ryan J Weber, Robert B Weiss, Michael C Wendl, Anthony P West, Kris Wetterstrand, Raymond 2.1716 +Wheeler, Simon Whelan, Jamey Wierzbowski, David Willey, Sophie Williams, Richard K Wilson, Eitan Win- 2.1717 +ter, Kim C Worley, Dudley Wyman, Shan Yang, Shiaw-Pyng Yang, Evgeny M Zdobnov, Michael C Zody, and 2.1718 +Eric S Lander. Initial sequencing and comparative analysis of the mouse genome. Nature, 420(6915):520&#8211; 2.1719 +62, December 2002. PMID: 12466850. 2.1720 2.1721
3.1 Binary file grant.odt has changed
4.1 Binary file grant.pdf has changed
5.1 --- a/grant.txt Tue Apr 21 18:53:40 2009 -0700 5.2 +++ b/grant.txt Wed Apr 22 05:26:06 2009 -0700 5.3 @@ -1,9 +1,30 @@ 5.4 -\documentclass{nih-blank} 5.5 +\documentclass[11pt]{nih-blank} 5.6 + 5.7 + 5.8 %%\piname{Stevens, Charles F.} 5.9 5.10 %%\usepackage{floatflt} 5.11 \usepackage{wrapfig} 5.12 5.13 +%%\renewcommand{\rmdefault}{phv} %% Arial 5.14 +%%\renewcommand{\sfdefault}{phv} %% Arial 5.15 + 5.16 +%%\usepackage[T1]{fontenc} 5.17 +%%\usepackage[scaled]{uarial} 5.18 + 5.19 +%% \fontencoding{T1} 5.20 +%% \fontfamily{garamond} 5.21 + 5.22 +%% \fontseries{m} 5.23 +%% \fontshape{it} 5.24 + 5.25 +%% \fontfamily{arial} 5.26 +%% \fontsize{11}{15} 5.27 +%% \selectfont 5.28 + 5.29 +\begin{document} 5.30 + 5.31 + 5.32 == Specific aims == 5.33 5.34 Massive new datasets obtained with techniques such as in situ hybridization (ISH), immunohistochemistry, in situ transgenic reporter, microarray voxelation, and others, allow the expression levels of many genes at many locations to be compared. Our goal is to develop automated methods to relate spatial variation in gene expression to anatomy. We want to find marker genes for specific anatomical regions, and also to draw new anatomical maps based on gene expression patterns. We have three specific aims:\\ 5.35 @@ -463,7 +484,7 @@ 5.36 5.37 5.38 5.39 -We have applied the following dimensionality reduction algorithms to reduce the dimensionality of the gene expression profile associated with each voxel: Principal Components Analysis (PCA), Simple PCA (SPCA), Multi-Dimensional Scaling (MDS), Isomap, Landmark Isomap, Laplacian eigenmaps, Local Tangent Space Alignment (LTSA), Hessian locally linear embedding, Diffusion maps, Stochastic Neighbor Embedding (SNE), Stochastic Proximity Embedding (SPE), Fast Maximum Variance Unfolding (FastMVU), Non-negative Matrix Factorization (NNMF). Space constraints prevent us from showing many of the results, but as a sample, PCA, NNMF, and landmark Isomap are shown in the first, second, and third rows of Figure \ref{dimReduc}. 5.40 +We have applied the following dimensionality reduction algorithms to reduce the dimensionality of the gene expression profile associated with each pixel: Principal Components Analysis (PCA), Simple PCA (SPCA), Multi-Dimensional Scaling (MDS), Isomap, Landmark Isomap, Laplacian eigenmaps, Local Tangent Space Alignment (LTSA), Stochastic Proximity Embedding (SPE), Fast Maximum Variance Unfolding (FastMVU), Non-negative Matrix Factorization (NNMF). Space constraints prevent us from showing many of the results, but as a sample, PCA, NNMF, and landmark Isomap are shown in the first, second, and third rows of Figure \ref{dimReduc}. 5.41 5.42 After applying the dimensionality reduction, we ran clustering algorithms on the reduced data. To date we have tried k-means and spectral clustering. The results of k-means after PCA, NNMF, and landmark Isomap are shown in the last row of Figure \ref{dimReduc}. To compare, the leftmost picture on the bottom row of Figure \ref{dimReduc} shows some of the major subdivisions of cortex. These results clearly show that different dimensionality reduction techniques capture different aspects of the data and lead to different clusterings, indicating the utility of our proposal to produce a detailed comparion of these techniques as applied to the domain of genomic anatomy. 5.43 5.44 @@ -475,7 +496,7 @@ 5.45 \label{geneClusters}\end{wrapfigure} 5.46 5.47 \vspace{0.3cm}**Many areas are captured by clusters of genes** 5.48 -We also clustered the genes using gradient similarity to see if the spatial regions defined by any clusters matched known anatomical regions. Figure \ref{geneClusters} shows, for ten sample gene clusters, each cluster's average expression pattern, compared to a known anatomical boundary. This suggests that it is worth attempting to cluster genes, and then to use the results to cluster voxels. 5.49 +We also clustered the genes using gradient similarity to see if the spatial regions defined by any clusters matched known anatomical regions. Figure \ref{geneClusters} shows, for ten sample gene clusters, each cluster's average expression pattern, compared to a known anatomical boundary. This suggests that it is worth attempting to cluster genes, and then to use the results to cluster pixels. 5.50 5.51 5.52 5.53 @@ -504,10 +525,8 @@ 5.54 5.55 === Develop algorithms that find genetic markers for anatomical regions === 5.56 5.57 -%%\vspace{0.3cm}**Scoring measures and feature selection** 5.58 - 5.59 +\vspace{0.3cm}**Scoring measures and feature selection** 5.60 %%We will develop scoring methods for evaluating how good individual genes are at marking areas. We will compare pointwise, geometric, and information-theoretic measures. We already developed one entirely new scoring method (gradient similarity), but we may develop more. Scoring measures that we will explore will include the L1 norm, correlation, expression energy ratio, conditional entropy, gradient similarity, Jaccard similarity, Dice similarity, Hough transform, and statistical tests such as Hotelling's T-square test (a multivariate generalization of Student's t-test), ANOVA, and a multivariate version of the Mann-Whitney U test (a non-parametric test). 5.61 - 5.62 We will develop scoring methods for evaluating how good individual genes are at marking areas. We will compare pointwise, geometric, and information-theoretic measures. We already developed one entirely new scoring method (gradient similarity), but we may develop more. Scoring measures that we will explore will include the L1 norm, correlation, expression energy ratio, conditional entropy, gradient similarity, Jaccard similarity, Dice similarity, Hough transform, and statistical tests such as Student's t-test, and the Mann-Whitney U test (a non-parametric test). In addition, any classifier induces a scoring measure on genes by taking the prediction error when using that gene to predict the target. 5.63 5.64 Using some combination of these measures, we will develop a procedure to find single marker genes for anatomical regions: for each cortical area, we will rank the genes by their ability to delineate each area. We will quantitatively compare the list of single genes generated by our method to the lists generated by previous methods which are mentioned in Aim 1 Related Work. 5.65 @@ -519,50 +538,55 @@ 5.66 5.67 Since errors of displacement and of shape may cause genes and target areas to match less than they should, we will consider the robustness of feature selection methods in the presence of error. Some of these methods, such as the Hough transform, are designed to be resistant in the presence of error, but many are not. We will consider extensions to scoring measures that may improve their robustness; for example, a wrapper that runs a scoring method on small displacements and distortions of the data adds robustness to registration error at the expense of computation time. 5.68 5.69 -An area may be difficult to identify because the boundaries are misdrawn in the atlas, or because the shape of the natural domain of gene expression corresponding to the area is different from the shape of the area as recognized by anatomists. We will extend our procedure to handle difficult areas by combining areas or redrawing their boundaries. We will develop extensions to our procedure which (a) detect when a difficult area could be fit if its boundary were redrawn slightly, and (b) detect when a difficult area could be combined with adjacent areas to create a larger area which can be fit. 5.70 +An area may be difficult to identify because the boundaries are misdrawn in the atlas, or because the shape of the natural domain of gene expression corresponding to the area is different from the shape of the area as recognized by anatomists. We will extend our procedure to handle difficult areas by combining areas or redrawing their boundaries. We will develop extensions to our procedure which (a) detect when a difficult area could be fit if its boundary were redrawn slightly\footnote{Not just any redrawing is acceptable, only those which appear to be justified as a natural spatial domain of gene expression by multiple sources of evidence. Interestingly, the need to detect "natural spatial domains of gene expression" in a data-driven fashion means that the methods of Aim 2 might be useful in achieving Aim 1, as well -- particularly discriminative dimensionality reduction.}, and (b) detect when a difficult area could be combined with adjacent areas to create a larger area which can be fit. 5.71 5.72 A future publication on the method that we develop in Aim 1 will review the scoring measures and quantitatively compare their performance in order to provide a foundation for future research of methods of marker gene finding. We will measure the robustness of the scoring measures as well as their absolute performance on our dataset. 5.73 5.74 \vspace{0.3cm}**Classifiers** 5.75 - 5.76 We will explore and compare different classifiers. As noted above, this activity is not separate from the previous one, because some supervised learning algorithms include feature selection, and any classifier can be combined with a stepwise wrapper for use as a feature selection method. We will explore logistic regression (including spatial models\cite{paciorek_computational_2007}), decision trees\footnote{Actually, we have already begun to explore decision trees. For each cortical area, we have used the C4.5 algorithm to find a decision tree for that area. We achieved good classification accuracy on our training set, but the number of genes that appeared in each tree was too large. We plan to implement a pruning procedure to generate trees that use fewer genes.}, sparse SVMs, generative mixture models (including naive bayes), kernel density estimation, instance-based learning methods (such as k-nearest neighbor), genetic algorithms, and artificial neural networks. 5.77 5.78 -\vspace{0.3cm}**Application to cortical areas** 5.79 - 5.80 - 5.81 - 5.82 -# confirm with EMAGE, GeneAtlas, GENSAT, etc, to fight overfitting, two hemis 5.83 - 5.84 - 5.85 -\vspace{0.3cm}**Develop algorithms to suggest a division of a structure into anatomical parts** 5.86 - 5.87 -# Explore dimensionality reduction algorithms applied to pixels: including TODO 5.88 -# Explore dimensionality reduction algorithms applied to genes: including TODO 5.89 -# Explore clustering algorithms applied to pixels: including TODO 5.90 -# Explore clustering algorithms applied to genes: including gene shaving\cite{hastie_gene_2000}, TODO 5.91 -# Develop an algorithm to use dimensionality reduction and/or hierarchial clustering to create anatomical maps 5.92 -# Run this algorithm on the cortex: present a hierarchial, genoarchitectonic map of the cortex 5.93 - 5.94 -# Linear discriminant analysis 5.95 - 5.96 -# jbt, coclustering 5.97 - 5.98 -# self-organizing map 5.99 - 5.100 -# Linear discriminant analysis 5.101 - 5.102 - 5.103 -# compare using clustering scores 5.104 - 5.105 -# multivariate gradient similarity 5.106 - 5.107 -# deep belief nets 5.108 - 5.109 - 5.110 - 5.111 -\vspace{0.3cm}**Apply these algorithms to the cortex** 5.112 - 5.113 -Using the methods developed in Aim 1, we will present, for each cortical area, a short list of markers to identify that area; and we will also present lists of "panels" of genes that can be used to delineate many areas at once. Using the methods developed in Aim 2, we will present one or more hierarchial cortical maps. We will identify and explain how the statistical structure in the gene expression data led to any unexpected or interesting features of these maps, and we will provide biological hypotheses to interpret any new cortical areas, or groupings of areas, which are discovered. 5.114 + 5.115 + 5.116 +=== Develop algorithms to suggest a division of a structure into anatomical parts === 5.117 + 5.118 +\vspace{0.3cm}**Explore dimensionality reduction on gene expression profiles** 5.119 +We have already described the application of ten dimensionality reduction algorithms for the purpose of replacing the gene expression profiles, which are vectors of about 4000 gene expression levels, with a smaller number of features. We plan to further explore and interpret these results, as well as to apply other unsupervised learning algorithms, including independent components analysis, self-organizing maps, and generative models such as deep Boltzmann machines. We will explore ways to quantitatively compare the relevance of the different dimensionality reduction methods for identifying cortical areal boundaries. 5.120 + 5.121 +\vspace{0.3cm}**Explore dimensionality reduction on pixels** 5.122 +Instead of applying dimensionality reduction to the gene expression profiles, the same techniques can be applied instead to the pixels\footnote{Consider a matrix whose rows represent pixel locations, and whose columns represent genes. An entry in this matrix represents the gene expression level at a given pixel. One can look at this matrix as a collection of pixels, each corresponding to a vector of many gene expression levels; or one can look at it as a collection of genes, each corresponding to a vector giving that gene's expression at each pixel. Similarly, dimensionality reduction can be used to replace a large number of genes with a small number of features, or it can be used to replace a large number of pixels with a small number of features.}. It is possible that the features generated in this way by some dimensionality reduction techniques will directly correspond to interesting spatial regions. 5.123 + 5.124 + 5.125 +\vspace{0.3cm}**Explore clustering and segmentation algorithms on pixels** 5.126 +We will explore clustering and segmentation algorithms in order to segment the pixels into regions. We will explore k-means, spectral clustering, gene shaving\cite{hastie_gene_2000}, recursive division clustering, multivariate generalizations of edge detectors, multivariate generalizations of watershed transformations, region growing, active contours, graph partitioning methods, and recursive agglomerative clustering with various linkage functions. These methods can be combined with dimensionality reduction. 5.127 + 5.128 +\vspace{0.3cm}**Explore clustering on genes** 5.129 +We have already shown that the procedure of clustering genes according to gradient similarity, and then creating an averaged prototype of each cluster's expression pattern, yields some spatial patterns which match cortical areas. We will further explore the clustering of genes. 5.130 + 5.131 +In addition to using the cluster expression prototypes directly to identify spatial regions, this might be useful as a component of dimensionality reduction. For example, one could imagine clustering similar genes and then replacing their expression levels with a single average expression level, thereby removing some redundancy from the gene expression profiles. One could then perform clustering on pixels (possibly after a second dimensionality reduction step) in order to identify spatial regions. It remains to be seen whether removal of redundancy would help or hurt the ultimate goal of identifying interesting spatial regions. 5.132 + 5.133 +\vspace{0.3cm}**Explore co-clustering** 5.134 +There are some algorithms which simultaineously incorporate clustering on instances and on features (in our case, genes and pixels), for example, IRM\cite{kemp_learning_2006}. These are called co-clustering or biclustering algorithms. 5.135 + 5.136 + 5.137 + 5.138 + 5.139 +\vspace{0.3cm}**Quantitatively compare different methods** 5.140 +In order to tell which method is best for genomic anatomy, for each experimental method we will compare the cortical map found by unsupervised learning to a cortical map derived from the Allen Reference Atlas. In order to compare the experimental clustering with the reference clustering, we will explore various quantitative metrics that purport to measure how similar two clusterings are, such as Jaccard, Rand index, Fowlkes-Mallows, variation of information, Larsen, Van Dongen, and others. 5.141 + 5.142 + 5.143 +\vspace{0.3cm}**Discriminative dimensionality reduction** 5.144 +In addition to using a purely data-driven approach to identify spatial regions, it might be useful to see how well the known regions can be reconstructed from a small number of features, even if those features are chosen by using knowledge of the regions. For example, linear discriminant analysis could be used as a dimensionality reduction technique in order to identify a few features which are the best linear summary of gene expression profiles for the purpose of discriminating between regions. This reduced feature set could then be used to cluster pixels into regions. Perhaps the resulting clusters will be similar to the reference atlas, yet more faithful to natural spatial domains of gene expression than the reference atlas is. 5.145 + 5.146 + 5.147 +=== Apply the new methods to the cortex === 5.148 +Using the methods developed in Aim 1, we will present, for each cortical area, a short list of markers to identify that area; and we will also present lists of "panels" of genes that can be used to delineate many areas at once. 5.149 + 5.150 +Because in most cases the ABA coronal dataset only contains one ISH per gene, it is possible for an unrelated combination of genes to seem to identify an area when in fact it is only coincidence. There are two ways we will validate our marker genes to guard against this. First, we will confirm that putative combinations of marker genes express the same pattern in both hemispheres. Second, we will manually validate our final results on other gene expression datasets such as EMAGE, GeneAtlas, and GENSAT. 5.151 + 5.152 +Using the methods developed in Aim 2, we will present one or more hierarchial cortical maps. We will identify and explain how the statistical structure in the gene expression data led to any unexpected or interesting features of these maps, and we will provide biological hypotheses to interpret any new cortical areas, or groupings of areas, which are discovered. 5.153 + 5.154 + 5.155 + 5.156 5.157 5.158 %%# note: slice artifact 5.159 @@ -573,22 +597,21 @@ 5.160 5.161 == Timeline and milestones == 5.162 5.163 -=== Finding marker genes === 5.164 - 5.165 -* September-November 2009: Develop an automated mechanism for segmenting the cortical voxels into layers 5.166 -* November 2009 (milestone): Have completed construction of a flatmapped, cortical dataset with information for each layer 5.167 -* October 2009-April 2010: Develop scoring methods and to test them in various supervised learning frameworks. Also test out various dimensionality reduction schemes in combination with supervised learning. create or extend supervised learning frameworks which use multivariate versions of the best scoring methods. 5.168 -* January 2010 (milestone): Submit a publication on single marker genes for cortical areas 5.169 -* February-July 2010: Continue to develop scoring methods and supervised learning frameworks. Explore the best way to integrate radial profiles with supervised learning. Explore the best way to make supervised learning techniques robust against incorrect labels (i.e. when the areas drawn on the input cortical map are slightly off). Quantitatively compare the performance of different supervised learning techniques. Validate marker genes found in the ABA dataset by checking against other gene expression datasets. Create documentation and unit tests for software toolbox for Aim 1. Respond to user bug reports for Aim 1 software toolbox. 5.170 -* June 2010 (milestone): Submit a paper describing a method fulfilling Aim 1. Release toolbox. 5.171 -* July 2010 (milestone): Submit a paper describing combinations of marker genes for each cortical area, and a small number of marker genes that can, in combination, define most of the areas at once 5.172 - 5.173 -=== Revealing new ways to parcellate a structure into regions === 5.174 -* June 2010-March 2011: Explore dimensionality reduction algorithms for Aim 2. Explore standard hierarchial clustering algorithms, used in combination with dimensionality reduction, for Aim 2. Explore co-clustering algorithms. Think about how radial profile information can be used for Aim 2. Adapt clustering algorithms to use radial profile information. Quantitatively compare the performance of different dimensionality reduction and clustering techniques. Quantitatively compare the value of different flatmapping methods and ways of representing radial profiles. 5.175 -* March 2011 (milestone): Submit a paper describing a method fulfilling Aim 2. Release toolbox. 5.176 -* February-May 2011: Using the methods developed for Aim 2, explore the genomic anatomy of the cortex. If new ways of organizing the cortex into areas are discovered, read the literature and talk to people to learn about research related to interpreting our results. Create documentation and unit tests for software toolbox for Aim 2. Respond to user bug reports for Aim 2 software toolbox. 5.177 -* May 2011 (milestone): Submit a paper on the genomic anatomy of the cortex, using the methods developed in Aim 2 5.178 -* May-August 2011: Revisit Aim 1 to see if what was learned during Aim 2 can improve the methods for Aim 1. Follow up on responses to our papers. Possibly submit another paper. 5.179 +\vspace{0.3cm}**Finding marker genes** 5.180 +\\ **September-November 2009**: Develop an automated mechanism for segmenting the cortical voxels into layers 5.181 +\\ **November 2009 (milestone)**: Have completed construction of a flatmapped, cortical dataset with information for each layer 5.182 +\\ **October 2009-April 2010**: Develop scoring methods and to test them in various supervised learning frameworks. Also test out various dimensionality reduction schemes in combination with supervised learning. create or extend supervised learning frameworks which use multivariate versions of the best scoring methods. 5.183 +\\ **January 2010 (milestone)**: Submit a publication on single marker genes for cortical areas 5.184 +\\ **February-July 2010**: Continue to develop scoring methods and supervised learning frameworks. Explore the best way to integrate radial profiles with supervised learning. Explore the best way to make supervised learning techniques robust against incorrect labels (i.e. when the areas drawn on the input cortical map are slightly off). Quantitatively compare the performance of different supervised learning techniques. Validate marker genes found in the ABA dataset by checking against other gene expression datasets. Create documentation and unit tests for software toolbox for Aim 1. Respond to user bug reports for Aim 1 software toolbox. 5.185 +\\ **June 2010 (milestone)**: Submit a paper describing a method fulfilling Aim 1. Release toolbox. 5.186 +\\ **July 2010 (milestone)**: Submit a paper describing combinations of marker genes for each cortical area, and a small number of marker genes that can, in combination, define most of the areas at once 5.187 + 5.188 +\vspace{0.3cm}**Revealing new ways to parcellate a structure into regions** 5.189 +\\ **June 2010-March 2011**: Explore dimensionality reduction algorithms for Aim 2. Explore standard hierarchial clustering algorithms, used in combination with dimensionality reduction, for Aim 2. Explore co-clustering algorithms. Think about how radial profile information can be used for Aim 2. Adapt clustering algorithms to use radial profile information. Quantitatively compare the performance of different dimensionality reduction and clustering techniques. Quantitatively compare the value of different flatmapping methods and ways of representing radial profiles. 5.190 +\\ **March 2011 (milestone)**: Submit a paper describing a method fulfilling Aim 2. Release toolbox. 5.191 +\\ **February-May 2011**: Using the methods developed for Aim 2, explore the genomic anatomy of the cortex. If new ways of organizing the cortex into areas are discovered, read the literature and talk to people to learn about research related to interpreting our results. Create documentation and unit tests for software toolbox for Aim 2. Respond to user bug reports for Aim 2 software toolbox. 5.192 +\\ **May 2011 (milestone)**: Submit a paper on the genomic anatomy of the cortex, using the methods developed in Aim 2 5.193 +\\ **May-August 2011**: Revisit Aim 1 to see if what was learned during Aim 2 can improve the methods for Aim 1. Follow up on responses to our papers. Possibly submit another paper. 5.194 5.195 \newpage 5.196 5.197 @@ -603,3 +626,4 @@ 5.198 5.199 5.200 5.201 +\end{document}
6.1 --- a/nih-blank.cls Tue Apr 21 18:53:40 2009 -0700 6.2 +++ b/nih-blank.cls Wed Apr 22 05:26:06 2009 -0700 6.3 @@ -45,11 +45,13 @@ 6.4 %% Use at least one-half inch margins (top, bottom, left, and right) for all pages. 6.5 % Leaves enough room on all margins: 6.6 6.7 +%% changed by bayle shanks: use .5 inch, not .49 6.8 + 6.9 % 0.5 inch top 6.10 -%\RequirePackage[letterpaper,left=0.5in,top=0.5in,bottom=0.575in,right=0.55in,nohead,nofoot]{geometry} 6.11 +\RequirePackage[letterpaper,left=0.5in,top=0.5in,bottom=0.575in,right=0.55in,nohead,nofoot]{geometry} 6.12 6.13 % 0.49 inch top 6.14 -\RequirePackage[letterpaper,left=0.5in,top=0.49in,bottom=0.575in,right=0.55in,nohead,nofoot]{geometry} 6.15 +%\RequirePackage[letterpaper,left=0.5in,top=0.49in,bottom=0.575in,right=0.55in,nohead,nofoot]{geometry} 6.16 6.17 6.18