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Getting Genetics Done

Getting Things Done in Genetics & Bioinformatics Research
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Noteworthy BlogsBiologíaInglés
Publicado
Autor Stephen Turner

I have a noteworthy blogs tag on this blog that I sort of forgot about, and haven't used in years. But I started reading one recently that's definitely qualified for the distinction. The Microbiome Digest is written by Elisabeth Bik, a scientist studying the microbiome at Stanford.

RBiologíaInglés
Publicado
Autor Stephen Turner

A colleague needed some help getting Illumina BeadArray gene expression data loaded into R for data analysis with limma. Hopefully whoever ran your arrays can export the data as text files formatted as described in the code below. If so, you can import those text files directly using the beadarray package.

LinuxQuicktipBiologíaInglés
Publicado
Autor Stephen Turner

Sometimes you need to run some UNIX command on a file but only want to operate on the body of the file, not the header. Create a file called body somewhere in your $PATH, make it executable, and add this to it: #!/bin/bash IFS= read -r header printf '%s\n' "$header" eval $@ Now, when you need to run something but ignore the header, use the body command first.

RStatisticsBiologíaInglés
Publicado
Autor Stephen Turner

I talked a little bit about tidy data my recent post about dplyr, but you should really go check out Hadley’s paper on the subject. R expects inputs to data analysis procedures to be in a tidy format, but the model output objects that you get back aren’t always tidy. The reshape2, tidyr, and dplyr are meant to take data frames, munge them around, and return a data frame.

RBiologíaInglés
Publicado
Autor Stephen Turner

TL;DR? We started an R Users group, awesome community, huge turnout at first meeting, lots of potential. --- I've sat through many hours of meetings where faculty lament the fact that their trainees (and the faculty themselves!) are woefully ill-prepared for our brave new world of computing- and data-intensive science.

LinuxBiologíaInglés
Publicado
Autor Stephen Turner

GNU datamash is a command-line utility that offers simple calculations (e.g. count, sum, min, max, mean, stdev, string coalescing) as well as a rich set of statistical functions, to quickly assess information in textual input files or from a UNIX pipe.

Data ScienceRTutorialsBiologíaInglés
Publicado
Autor Stephen Turner

Data “janitor-work” The New York Times recently ran a piece on wrangling and cleaning data: “For Big-Data Scientists, ‘Janitor Work’ Is Key Hurdle to Insights” Whether you call it “janitor-work,” wrangling/munging, cleaning/cleansing/scrubbing, tidying, or something else, the article above is worth a read (even though it implicitly denigrates the important work that your housekeeping staff does). It’s one of the few “Big Data” pieces that

BioinformaticsRRNA-SeqTutorialsBiologíaInglés
Publicado
Autor Stephen Turner

Last week I taught a three-hour introduction to R workshop for life scientists at UVA's Health Sciences Library. I broke the workshop into three sections: In the first half hour or so I presented slides giving an overview of R and why R is so awesome. During this session I emphasized reproducible research and gave a demonstration of using knitr + rmarkdown in RStudio to produce a PDF that can easily be recompiled when data updates.

BioinformaticsRTutorialsBiologíaInglés
Publicado
Autor Stephen Turner

A couple of months ago I posted about how to visualize exome coverage with bedtools and R. But if you're looking to get a basic handle on genome arithmetic, take a look at Aaron Quinlan's bedtools tutorials from the 2013 CSHL course.