scholarly journals intansv: an R package for integrative analysis of structural variations

PeerJ ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 8 ◽  
pp. e8867
Author(s):  
Lihua Jia ◽  
Na Liu ◽  
Fangfang Huang ◽  
Zhengfu Zhou ◽  
Xin He ◽  
...  

Identification of structural variations between individuals is very important for the understanding of phenotype variations and diseases. Despite the existence of dozens of programs for prediction of structural variations, none of them is the golden standard in this field and the results of multiple programs were usually integrated to get more reliable predictions. Annotation and visualization of structural variations are important for the understanding of their functions. However, no program provides these functions currently as far as we are concerned. We report an R package, intansv, which can integrate the predictions of multiple programs as well as annotate and visualize structural variations. The source code and the help manual of intansv is freely available at https://github.com/venyao/intansv and http://www.bioconductor.org/packages/devel/bioc/html/intansv.html.

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tim Schäfer ◽  
Christine Ecker

AbstractSummaryWe introduce fsbrain, an R package for the visualization of neuroimaging data. The package can be used to visualize vertex-wise and region-wise morphometry data, parcellations, labels and statistical results on brain surfaces in three dimensions (3D). Voxel data can be displayed in lightbox mode. The fsbrain package offers various customization options and produces publication quality plots which can be displayed interactively, saved as bitmap images, or integrated into R notebooks.Availability and ImplementationThe software, source code and documentation are available under the MIT license at https://github.com/dfsp-spirit/fsbrain. Releases can be installed directly from the Comprehensive R Archive Network (CRAN)[email protected]


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
E Onur Karakaslar ◽  
Duygu Ucar

AbstractSummaryATAC-seq is a frequently used assay to study chromatin accessibility levels. Differential chromatin accessibility analyses between biological groups and functional interpretation of these differential regions are essential in ATAC-seq data analyses. Although distinct methods and analyses pipelines are developed for this purpose, a stand-alone R package that combines state-of-the art differential and functional enrichment analyses pipelines is missing. To fill this gap, we developed cinaR (Chromatin Analyses in R), which is a single wrapper function and provides users with various data analyses and visualization options, including functional enrichment analyses with gene sets curated from multiple sources.Availability and implementationcinaR is an R/CRAN package which is under GPL-3 License and its source code is freely accessible at https://CRAN.R-project.org/package=cinaR.Gene sets are available at https://CRAN.R-project.org/package=cinaRgenesets.Bone marrow ATAC-seq data is available at https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/geo/query/[email protected] or [email protected]


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Amanda Kowalczyk ◽  
Wynn K Meyer ◽  
Raghavendran Partha ◽  
Weiguang Mao ◽  
Nathan L Clark ◽  
...  

AbstractMotivation: When different lineages of organisms independently adapt to similar environments, selection often acts repeatedly upon the same genes, leading to signatures of convergent evolutionary rate shifts at these genes. With the increasing availability of genome sequences for organisms displaying a variety of convergent traits, the ability to identify genes with such convergent rate signatures would enable new insights into the molecular basis of these traits.Results: Here we present the R package RERconverge, which tests for association between relative evolutionary rates of genes and the evolution of traits across a phylogeny. RERconverge can perform associations with binary and continuous traits, and it contains tools for visualization and enrichment analyses of association results.Availability: RERconverge source code, documentation, and a detailed usage walk-through are freely available at https://github.com/nclark-lab/RERconverge. Datasets for mammals, Drosophila, and yeast are available at https://bit.ly/2J2QBnj.Contact:[email protected] information: Supplementary information, containing detailed vignettes for usage of RERconverge, are available at Bioinformatics online.


2020 ◽  
Vol 79 (Suppl 1) ◽  
pp. 1405.1-1406
Author(s):  
F. Morton ◽  
J. Nijjar ◽  
C. Goodyear ◽  
D. Porter

Background:The American College of Rheumatology (ACR) and the European League Against Rheumatism (EULAR) individually and collaboratively have produced/recommended diagnostic classification, response and functional status criteria for a range of different rheumatic diseases. While there are a number of different resources available for performing these calculations individually, currently there are no tools available that we are aware of to easily calculate these values for whole patient cohorts.Objectives:To develop a new software tool, which will enable both data analysts and also researchers and clinicians without programming skills to calculate ACR/EULAR related measures for a number of different rheumatic diseases.Methods:Criteria that had been developed by ACR and/or EULAR that had been approved for the diagnostic classification, measurement of treatment response and functional status in patients with rheumatoid arthritis were identified. Methods were created using the R programming language to allow the calculation of these criteria, which were incorporated into an R package. Additionally, an R/Shiny web application was developed to enable the calculations to be performed via a web browser using data presented as CSV or Microsoft Excel files.Results:acreular is a freely available, open source R package (downloadable fromhttps://github.com/fragla/acreular) that facilitates the calculation of ACR/EULAR related RA measures for whole patient cohorts. Measures, such as the ACR/EULAR (2010) RA classification criteria, can be determined using precalculated values for each component (small/large joint counts, duration in days, normal/abnormal acute-phase reactants, negative/low/high serology classification) or by providing “raw” data (small/large joint counts, onset/assessment dates, ESR/CRP and CCP/RF laboratory values). Other measures, including EULAR response and ACR20/50/70 response, can also be calculated by providing the required information. The accompanying web application is included as part of the R package but is also externally hosted athttps://fragla.shinyapps.io/shiny-acreular. This enables researchers and clinicians without any programming skills to easily calculate these measures by uploading either a Microsoft Excel or CSV file containing their data. Furthermore, the web application allows the incorporation of additional study covariates, enabling the automatic calculation of multigroup comparative statistics and the visualisation of the data through a number of different plots, both of which can be downloaded.Figure 1.The Data tab following the upload of data. Criteria are calculated by the selecting the appropriate checkbox.Figure 2.A density plot of DAS28 scores grouped by ACR/EULAR 2010 RA classification. Statistical analysis has been performed and shows a significant difference in DAS28 score between the two groups.Conclusion:The acreular R package facilitates the easy calculation of ACR/EULAR RA related disease measures for whole patient cohorts. Calculations can be performed either from within R or by using the accompanying web application, which also enables the graphical visualisation of data and the calculation of comparative statistics. We plan to further develop the package by adding additional RA related criteria and by adding ACR/EULAR related measures for other rheumatic disorders.Disclosure of Interests:Fraser Morton: None declared, Jagtar Nijjar Shareholder of: GlaxoSmithKline plc, Consultant of: Janssen Pharmaceuticals UK, Employee of: GlaxoSmithKline plc, Paid instructor for: Janssen Pharmaceuticals UK, Speakers bureau: Janssen Pharmaceuticals UK, AbbVie, Carl Goodyear: None declared, Duncan Porter: None declared


Data Science ◽  
2021 ◽  
pp. 1-21
Author(s):  
Caspar J. Van Lissa ◽  
Andreas M. Brandmaier ◽  
Loek Brinkman ◽  
Anna-Lena Lamprecht ◽  
Aaron Peikert ◽  
...  

Adopting open science principles can be challenging, requiring conceptual education and training in the use of new tools. This paper introduces the Workflow for Open Reproducible Code in Science (WORCS): A step-by-step procedure that researchers can follow to make a research project open and reproducible. This workflow intends to lower the threshold for adoption of open science principles. It is based on established best practices, and can be used either in parallel to, or in absence of, top-down requirements by journals, institutions, and funding bodies. To facilitate widespread adoption, the WORCS principles have been implemented in the R package worcs, which offers an RStudio project template and utility functions for specific workflow steps. This paper introduces the conceptual workflow, discusses how it meets different standards for open science, and addresses the functionality provided by the R implementation, worcs. This paper is primarily targeted towards scholars conducting research projects in R, conducting research that involves academic prose, analysis code, and tabular data. However, the workflow is flexible enough to accommodate other scenarios, and offers a starting point for customized solutions. The source code for the R package and manuscript, and a list of examplesof WORCS projects, are available at https://github.com/cjvanlissa/worcs.


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