To use all functions of this page, please activate cookies in your browser.
my.bionity.com
With an accout for my.bionity.com you can always see everything at a glance – and you can configure your own website and individual newsletter.
- My watch list
- My saved searches
- My saved topics
- My newsletter
Horizontal correlationHorizontal correlation is a methodology for gene sequence analysis. Rather than referring to one specific technique, horizontal correlation instead encompasses a variety of approaches to sequence analysis that are unified by two specific themes: The core ideas of the horizontal correlation approach were first presented in a year 2000 paper by Grosse, Herzel, Buldyrev, and Stanley (Grosse, et al. 2000). In this first formulation, Grosse and colleagues sought to characterize a large genetic sequence by dividing the sequence into coding and non-coding regions. Whereas traditional approaches to the coding-vs.-non-coding problem generally relied on sophisticated pattern recognition systems that were first trained on small inputs and then run over the entire sequence (Ohler, et al. 1999), the horizontal correlation approach of Grosse and colleagues worked instead by breaking the sequence into many relatively short sequence fragments, each only 500 base pairs in length. They then sought to characterize each of these fragments as either coding or non-coding. This was accomplished by comparing each size 3 window along the length of a fragment with the first size 3 window in that fragment, then measuring the value of the mutual information function between the two windows. Coding sequences were found to display a stylized pattern of 3-periodicity that non-coding sequences did not. Such a pattern was easy to recognize, and enabled significantly more rapid, more species-independent identification of coding regions (Grosse, et al. 2000). Since 2000, horizontal correlation methodologies emphasizing the measurement of information theoretic quantities along the length of a gene sequence have been put to widespread use, and have even found application in shotgun sequencing fragment assembly (Otu & Sayood, 2004). apparently, alex...in the middle of the morning in a field... on jairaj... your leg my leg your leg my leg... Works CitedI. Grosse, H. Herzel, S. Buldyrev, H. Stanley: "Species Independence of Mutual Information in Coding and non-Coding DNA," Physical Review E, Vol. 61, No. 5 (2000) U. Ohler, S. Harbeck, H. Niemann, E. Noth, and M. Reese: "Interpolated Markov Chains for Eukaryotic Promoter Recognition," Bioinformatics, Vol. 15, pp. 362-369 (1999) H. Otu, K. Sayood: "A Divide and Conquer Approach to Fragment Assembly," Bioinformatics, Vol. 19, No. 1 pp. 22-29 (2004) |
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Horizontal_correlation". A list of authors is available in Wikipedia. |