Gene selection for cancer classification using a hybrid of univariate and multivariate feature selection methods
This work addresses gene selection for cancer classification, offering a potentially more efficient and accurate method for biomedical researchers, though it appears incremental as it builds on existing techniques.
The authors tackled the problem of selecting genes for cancer classification from microarray data by proposing a hybrid method combining univariate and multivariate feature selection to overcome their individual limitations. Their method achieved the same or better prediction accuracy with fewer genes than existing approaches on leukemia and small, round blue cell tumors datasets.
Various approaches to gene selection for cancer classification based on microarray data can be found in the literature and they may be grouped into two categories: univariate methods and multivariate methods. Univariate methods look at each gene in the data in isolation from others. They measure the contribution of a particular gene to the classification without considering the presence of the other genes. In contrast, multivariate methods measure the relative contribution of a gene to the classification by taking the other genes in the data into consideration. Multivariate methods select fewer genes in general. However, the selection process of multivariate methods may be sensitive to the presence of irrelevant genes, noises in the expression and outliers in the training data. At the same time, the computational cost of multivariate methods is high. To overcome the disadvantages of the two types of approaches, we propose a hybrid method to obtain gene sets that are small and highly discriminative. We devise our hybrid method from the univariate Maximum Likelihood method (LIK) and the multivariate Recursive Feature Elimination method (RFE). We analyze the properties of these methods and systematically test the effectiveness of our proposed method on two cancer microarray datasets. Our experiments on a leukemia dataset and a small, round blue cell tumors dataset demonstrate the effectiveness of our hybrid method. It is able to discover sets consisting of fewer genes than those reported in the literature and at the same time achieve the same or better prediction accuracy.