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Issue title: Biological Data Mining
Article type: Research Article
Authors: King, Brian R.; | Guda, Chittibabu
Affiliations: Department of Computer Science, University at Albany, SUNY, Albany, NY, USA | Gen*NY*Sis Center for Excellence in Cancer Genomics, Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, University at Albany, State University of New York, Albany, NY, USA
Note: [] Corresponding author: B.R. King, Department of Computer Science, University at Albany, State University of New York, Albany, NY 12222, USA. E-mail: bking@cs.albany.edu.
Abstract: Protein sequence data continue to become available at an exponential rate. Annotation of functional and structural attributes of these data lags far behind, with only a small fraction of the data understood and labeled by experimental methods. Classification methods that are based on semi-supervised learning can increase the overall accuracy of classifying partly labeled data in many domains, but very few methods exist that have shown their effect on protein sequence classification. We show how proven methods from text classification can be applied to protein sequence data, as we consider both existing and novel extensions to the basic methods, and demonstrate restrictions and differences that must be considered. We demonstrate comparative results against the transductive support vector machine, and show superior results on the most difficult classification problems. Our results show that large repositories of unlabeled protein sequence data can indeed be used to improve predictive performance, particularly in situations where there are fewer labeled protein sequences available, and/or the data are highly unbalanced in nature.
Keywords: Bioinformatics, protein sequence classification, semi-supervised learning, expectation maximization, EM
DOI: 10.3233/SPR-2008-0241
Journal: Scientific Programming, vol. 16, no. 1, pp. 5-29, 2008
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