Searching for a single mathematical function to address the nonlinear retention time shifts problem in nanoLC-MS data: A fuzzy-evolutionary computational proteomics approach
Created by W.Langdon from
gp-bibliography.bib Revision:1.8051
- @InProceedings{Barton:2010:ieeeCIBCB,
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author = "Alan J. Barton",
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title = "Searching for a single mathematical function to
address the nonlinear retention time shifts problem in
nanoLC-MS data: A fuzzy-evolutionary computational
proteomics approach",
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booktitle = "2010 IEEE Symposium on Computational Intelligence in
Bioinformatics and Computational Biology (CIBCB)",
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year = "2010",
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month = may,
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abstract = "Proteomics involves collecting and analysing
information about proteins within one or more complex
samples in order to address a biological problem. One
methodology is the use of high performance liquid
chromatography coupled mass spectrometry (nanoLC-MS).
In such a case, the accurate determination of
non-linear peptide retention times between runs is
expected to increase the number of identified peptides
and hence, proteins. There are many approaches when
using a computer for such a problem; including very
interactive to completely non-interactive algorithms
for finding global and local functions that may be
either explicit or implicit. This paper extends
previous work and explores finding an explicit global
function for which two stages are involved: i)
computation of a set of candidate functions (results)
by the algorithm, and ii) searching within the set for
patterns of interest. For the first stage, three
classes of approximating global functions are
considered: Class 1 functions that have a completely
unknown structure, Class 2 functions that have a tiny
amount of domain knowledge incorporated, and Class 3
functions that have a small amount of domain knowledge
incorporated. For the second stage, some issues with
current similarity measures for mathematical
expressions are discussed and a new measure is
proposed. Preliminary experimental results with an
Evolutionary Computation algorithm called Gene
Expression Programming (a variant of Genetic
Programming) when used with a fuzzy membership within
the fitness function are reported.",
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keywords = "genetic algorithms, genetic programming, gene
expression programming, fuzzy-evolutionary
computational proteomics approach, liquid
chromatography coupled mass spectrometry, mathematical
function, nanoLC-MS, nanoLC-MS data, nonlinear
retention time shifts problem, biocomputing,
evolutionary computation, fuzzy set theory, proteins,
proteomics",
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DOI = "doi:10.1109/CIBCB.2010.5510688",
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notes = "Also known as \cite{5510688}",
- }
Genetic Programming entries for
Alan J Barton
Citations