Description Usage Arguments Details Value Author(s) References See Also Examples
Estimates relative quality weights for each array in a multi-array experiment.
1 2 | arrayWeights(object, design = NULL, weights = NULL, method = "genebygene", maxiter = 50, tol = 1e-10, trace=FALSE)
arrayWeightsSimple(object, design = NULL, maxiter = 100, tol = 1e-6, maxratio = 100, trace=FALSE)
|
object |
object of class |
design |
the design matrix of the microarray experiment, with rows corresponding to arrays and columns to coefficients to be estimated. Defaults to the unit vector meaning that the arrays are treated as replicates. |
weights |
optional numeric matrix containing prior weights for each spot. |
method |
character string specifying the estimating algorithm to be used. Choices
are |
maxiter |
maximum number of iterations allowed. |
tol |
convergence tolerance. |
maxratio |
maximum ratio between largest and smallest weights before iteration stops |
trace |
logical variable. If true then output diagnostic information at each iteration of the '"reml"' algorithm, or at every 1000th iteration of the '"genebygene"' algorithm. |
The relative reliability of each array is estimated by measuring how well the expression values for that array follow the linear model.
The method is described in Ritchie et al (2006).
A heteroscedastic model is fitted to the expression values for
each gene by calling the function lm.wfit
. The dispersion model
is fitted to the squared residuals from the mean fit, and is set up to
have array specific coefficients, which are updated in either full REML
scoring iterations, or using an efficient gene-by-gene update algorithm.
The final estimates of these array variances are converted to weights.
The data object object
is interpreted as for lmFit
.
In particular, the arguments design
and weights
will be extracted from the data
object
if available and do not normally need to be set explicitly in
the call; if any of these are set in the call then they will over-ride
the slots or components in the data object
.
arrayWeightsSimple
is a fast version of arrayWeights
with method="reml"
, no prior weights and no missing values.
A vector of array weights.
Matthew Ritchie and Gordon Smyth
Ritchie, M. E., Diyagama, D., Neilson, van Laar, R., J., Dobrovic, A., Holloway, A., and Smyth, G. K. (2006). Empirical array quality weights in the analysis of microarray data. BMC Bioinformatics 7, 261. http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2105/7/261/abstract
An overview of linear model functions in limma is given by 06.LinearModels.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 | ## Not run:
# Subset of data from ApoAI case study in Limma User's Guide
RG <- backgroundCorrect(RG, method="normexp")
MA <- normalizeWithinArrays(RG)
targets <- data.frame(Cy3=I(rep("Pool",6)),Cy5=I(c("WT","WT","WT","KO","KO","KO")))
design <- modelMatrix(targets, ref="Pool")
arrayw <- arrayWeightsSimple(MA, design)
fit <- lmFit(MA, design, weights=arrayw)
fit2 <- contrasts.fit(fit, contrasts=c(-1,1))
fit2 <- eBayes(fit2)
# Use of array weights increases the significance of the top genes
topTable(fit2)
## End(Not run)
|
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