Dear Conductors,
Is it better to use Pearson's or Spearman's correlation coefficient to
measure the reproducibility among microarray biological replicates?
I would be grateful for any hint.
Best,
B.
[[alternative HTML version deleted]]
On Mon, Jul 23, 2012 at 7:58 AM, Barbara Uszczynska
<uszczynska@gmail.com>wrote:
> Dear Conductors,
>
> Is it better to use Pearson's or Spearman's correlation coefficient
to
> measure the reproducibility among microarray biological replicates?
>
> I would be grateful for any hint.
>
>
Typically, after normalization, they will be nearly the same since the
effect of normalization is often to make the distributions of the
arrays
similar.
Sean
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Dear Barbara
both are actually not very useful for this purpose (and, as Sean said,
in about equal measure). For one alternative, have a look at the 'idr'
package on CRAN and this paper:
Q. Li, J. B. Brown, H. Huang and P. J. Bickel (2011). Measuring
reproducibility of high-throughput experiments. Annals of Applied
Statistics. www.stat.berkeley.edu/tech-reports/790.pdf
Best wishes
Wolfgang
Jul/23/12 4:17 PM, Sean Davis scripsit::
> On Mon, Jul 23, 2012 at 7:58 AM, Barbara Uszczynska <uszczynska at="" gmail.com="">wrote:
>
>> Dear Conductors,
>>
>> Is it better to use Pearson's or Spearman's correlation coefficient
to
>> measure the reproducibility among microarray biological replicates?
>>
>> I would be grateful for any hint.
>>
>>
> Typically, after normalization, they will be nearly the same since
the
> effect of normalization is often to make the distributions of the
arrays
> similar.
>
> Sean
>
> [[alternative HTML version deleted]]
>
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--
Best wishes
Wolfgang
Wolfgang Huber
EMBL
http://www.embl.de/research/units/genome_biology/huber