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Dagstuhl-Seminar 07131

Similarity-based Clustering and its Application to Medicine and Biology

( 25. Mar – 30. Mar, 2007 )

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Organisatoren



Impacts

Summary

In medicine, biology, and medical bioinformatics, more and more data arise from clinical measurements such as EEG or fMRI studies for monitoring brain activity, mass spectrometry data for the detection of proteins, peptides and composites, or microarray profiles for the analysis of gene expressions. Typically, data are high dimensional, noisy, and very hard to inspect using classical (e.g. symbolic or linear) methods. At the same time, new technologies ranging from the possibility of a very high resolution of spectra to high throughput screening for microarray data are rapidly developing and carry the promise of an efficient, cheap, and automatic gathering of tons of high quality data with large information potential. Thus, there is a need for appropriate machine learning methods which help to automatically extract and interprete the relevant parts of this information and which, eventually, help to enable understanding of biological systems, reliable diagnosis of faults, and therapy of diseases such as cancer based on this information.

The seminar centered around developments, understanding, and application of similarity-based clustering in complex domains related to the life sciences. These methods have a great potential as an intuitive and flexible toolbox for mining, visualization, and inspection of large data sets since they combine simple and human-understandabel principles with a large variety of different, problem adapted design choices. The goal of the seminar was to bring together researchers from Computer Science and Biology to explore recent algorithmic developments, discuss theoretical background and problems, and to identify important applications and challenges of the methods.

Results

A variety of open problems and challenges came up during the week. Before the seminar, the main challenge of similarity-based clustering in medicine and biology was seen as the problem to adapt similarity-based learning for complex, high-dimensional, and possibly non-euclidean data structures as they occur in these domains. During the discussions a much more widepread and subtle picture emerged, identifying the following topics as central issues for clustering:

  • Feature extraction
  • Cluster evaluation
  • Comparison/Benchmarks
  • Good sampling

Overal, the presentations and discussions revealed that similarity-based clustering constitutes a highly evolving field which seems particularly suitable for problems in medicine or biology and which still waits with quite a few open problems from researchers, a central problem being a formalization of goals and implicit regularization of clustering in the context of medicine and biology.


Teilnehmer
  • Michael Biehl (University of Groningen, NL) [dblp]
  • Rainer Breitling (University of Groningen, NL) [dblp]
  • Hans Burkhardt (Universität Freiburg, DE)
  • Nestor Caticha (University of Sao Paolo, BR) [dblp]
  • Eytan Domany (Weizmann Inst. - Rehovot, IL) [dblp]
  • Colin Fyfe (University of the West of Scotland - Paisley, GB)
  • Barbara Hammer (TU Clausthal, DE) [dblp]
  • Alexander Hasenfuss (TU Clausthal, DE)
  • David Hoyle (Univ. of Manchester, GB)
  • Samuel Kaski (Helsinki University of Technology, FI) [dblp]
  • John Aldo Lee (University of Louvain, BE) [dblp]
  • Yang Li (University of Groningen, NL)
  • Thomas Martinetz (Universität Lübeck, DE) [dblp]
  • Erzsébet Merényi (Rice University - Houston, US) [dblp]
  • Johannes Mohr (Bernstein Center for Comp. Neuroscience - Berlin, DE) [dblp]
  • Peter Riegler (Ostfalia Hochschule - Wolfenbüttel, DE)
  • Michal Rosen-Zvi (IBM - Haifa, IL) [dblp]
  • Fabrice Rossi (INRIA Rocquencourt, FR) [dblp]
  • David Saad (Aston University - Birmingham, GB)
  • Lidia Sanchez-Gonzalez (University of León, ES)
  • Craig Saunders (University of Southampton, GB)
  • Frank-Michael Schleif (Universität Leipzig, DE) [dblp]
  • Petra Schneider (University of Groningen, NL) [dblp]
  • Udo Seiffert (IPK Gatersleben, DE) [dblp]
  • Joachim Selbig (Universität Potsdam, DE)
  • Marc Strickert (IPK Gatersleben, DE) [dblp]
  • David M. J. Tax (TU Delft, NL)
  • Peter Tino (University of Birmingham, GB) [dblp]
  • Michel Verleysen (University of Louvain, BE) [dblp]
  • Thomas Villmann (Universität Leipzig, DE) [dblp]
  • Ulrike von Luxburg (MPI für biologische Kybernetik - Tübingen, DE) [dblp]
  • Michael Wilkinson (University of Groningen, NL)
  • Aree Witoelar (University of Groningen, NL)

Verwandte Seminare
  • Dagstuhl-Seminar 09081: Similarity-based learning on structures (2009-02-15 - 2009-02-20) (Details)

Klassifikation
  • AI
  • Soft computing
  • Interdisciplinary (medicine/biology)

Schlagworte
  • Similarity-based clustering and classification
  • prototype-based classifiers
  • self-organisation
  • SOM
  • learning vector quantization
  • medical diagnosis
  • bioinformatics