Inicio  /  Information  /  Vol: 14 Par: 2 (2023)  /  Artículo
ARTÍCULO
TITULO

Adaptive Savitzky?Golay Filters for Analysis of Copy Number Variation Peaks from Whole-Exome Sequencing Data

Peter Juma Ochieng    
Zoltán Maróti    
József Dombi    
Miklós Krész    
József Békési and Tibor Kalmár    

Resumen

Copy number variation (CNV) is a form of structural variation in the human genome that provides medical insight into complex human diseases; while whole-genome sequencing is becoming more affordable, whole-exome sequencing (WES) remains an important tool in clinical diagnostics. Because of its discontinuous nature and unique characteristics of sparse target-enrichment-based WES data, the analysis and detection of CNV peaks remain difficult tasks. The Savitzky?Golay (SG) smoothing is well known as a fast and efficient smoothing method. However, no study has documented the use of this technique for CNV peak detection. It is well known that the effectiveness of the classical SG filter depends on the proper selection of the window length and polynomial degree, which should correspond with the scale of the peak because, in the case of peaks with a high rate of change, the effectiveness of the filter could be restricted. Based on the Savitzky?Golay algorithm, this paper introduces a novel adaptive method to smooth irregular peak distributions. The proposed method ensures high-precision noise reduction by dynamically modifying the results of the prior smoothing to automatically adjust parameters. Our method offers an additional feature extraction technique based on density and Euclidean distance. In comparison to classical Savitzky?Golay filtering and other peer filtering methods, the performance evaluation demonstrates that adaptive Savitzky?Golay filtering performs better. According to experimental results, our method effectively detects CNV peaks across all genomic segments for both short and long tags, with minimal peak height fidelity values (i.e., low estimation bias). As a result, we clearly demonstrate how well the adaptive Savitzky?Golay filtering method works and how its use in the detection of CNV peaks can complement the existing techniques used in CNV peak analysis.

 Artículos similares

       
 
Miodrag D. Ku?ljevic, Vladimir V. Vujicic, Josif J. Tomic and Predrag D. Poljak    
The use of a filter bank of IIR filters for the spectral decomposition and analysis of signals has been popular for many years. As such, a new filter-bank resonator-based structure, representing an extremely hardware-efficient structure, has received a g... ver más
Revista: Acoustics

 
Muhamad Azim Azhad Shahrim, Chen Ciang Chia, Hafiz Rashidi Ramli, Mohammad Yazdi Harmin and Jung-Ryul Lee    
Aerospace thin-walled structures are susceptible to various forms of damage and they can be effectively inspected using Lamb wavefields. However, Lamb wavefields contain at least two dispersive modes which interfere with the generation of a clear image f... ver más
Revista: Aerospace

 
Alexandru-George Rusu, Constantin Paleologu, Jacob Benesty and Silviu Ciochina    
The principal issue in acoustic echo cancellation (AEC) is to estimate the impulse response between the loudspeaker and microphone of a hands-free communication device. This application can be addressed as a system identification problem, which can be so... ver más
Revista: Algorithms

 
Sung-Bo Kim and Hong-Lyun Park    
In this study, we extracted three source wavelets of a Chirp sub-bottom profiler (SBP), which is widely used for high-resolution marine seismic exploration, using a MATLAB-based graphical user interface tool for computational processing. To extract the s... ver más

 
Bokyu Kwon and Sang-il Kim    
In this paper, the recursive form of an optimal finite impulse response filter is proposed for discrete time-varying state-space models. The recursive form of the finite impulse response filter is derived by employing finite horizon Kalman filtering with... ver más
Revista: Applied Sciences