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Event Detail

Biostatistics Seminar Series

Estimation and Inference in Metabolomics - Chris McKennan, University of Pittsburgh

Thursday 10/31 3:30PM - 4:30PM
Public Health Lecture Hall (A115)

Estimation and inference in metabolomics with non-random missing data and latent confounding factors

High throughput metabolomics data are fraught with both non-ignorable missing observations and unobserved factors that influence a metabolite's measured concentration, and it is well known that ignoring either of these complications can compromise estimators. However, current methods to analyze these data can only account for the missing data or unobserved factors, but not both. We therefore developed MetabMiss, a statistically rigorous method to account for both non-random missing data and latent factors in high throughput metabolomics data. Our methodology does not require the practitioner specify a probability model for the missing data, and makes investigating the relationship between the metabolome and tens, or even hundreds, of phenotypes computationally tractable. We demonstrate the fidelity of MetabMiss's estimates using both simulated and real metabolomics data, and prove their asymptotic correctness when the sample size and number of metabolites grows to infinity.

Last Updated On Thursday, October 17, 2019 by Tang, Lu
Created On Monday, August 26, 2019