Entering edit mode
Brooke-Powell, Elizabeth
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170
@brooke-powell-elizabeth-1185
Last seen 10.2 years ago
Michael,
I was interested in how you flag your data, when you load your files
do you
read in your flag column as part of a standard GenePix type output
file, so
limma uses it when the linear model is fit? I use BlueFuse and its
flag
column is quite different from GenePix and the like and at present not
able
to be used in limma. I am wondering how to mark (flag) the bad data
and
either leave it in or what to put in the data file to get the data
ignored
i.e. can you put NA in place of the data point and have it ignored? Is
it as
simple as creating a new flag column converting the BlueFuse flags
into
GenePix like flags? If I load the data file using the other file type
option
in LimmaGUI it doesn't allow me to tell it where there is a flag
column. Is
this something that could be fixed assuming the flag column conforms
to the
GenePix style of 0, +1 and -1 calls?
Thanks for the help and insight,
Liz
------------------------------
Message: 12
Date: Thu, 21 Jul 2005 10:56:09 +0100
From: "michael watson \(IAH-C\)" < >
Subject: Re: [BioC] Gene filtering for differential expression (limma)
To: "Spela Baebler" <spela.baebler at="" nib.si="">
Cc: bioconductor at stat.math.ethz.ch
Message-ID:
<8975119BCD0AC5419D61A9CF1A923E950172DA58 at
iahce2knas1.iah.bbsrc.reserved>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
Gordon's right, if you post an example of your targets file we will
have
a better idea of what you mean
>>Initial quality control and
>>spot filtering are performed in image analysis program.
Personally, I wouldn't recommend doing this. The way R works, it's
better to have all your data points present in all files. I leave all
data in and flag up bad spots, and remove them at the end of the
analysis, not the beginning
:-)