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In this tutorial we show how to use the different functions and options in multiclassPairs
package (v0.4.3), including training a pair-based classifier, predict classes in test data, and visualize the prediction scores and rules.
multiclassPairs
package is available on CRAN and GitHub. You can use the following code to install multiclassPairs
package from CRAN and GitHub and its dependencies from Bioconductor.
# Install the released version from CRAN using
if (!requireNamespace("multiclassPairs", quietly = TRUE)) {
install.packages("multiclassPairs")
}
# Or install the dev version from GitHub using
# if (!requireNamespace("multiclassPairs", quietly = TRUE)) {
# if (!requireNamespace("devtools", quietly = TRUE)) {
# install.packages("devtools")
# }
# library(devtools) # this package is needed to install from GitHub
# install_github("NourMarzouka/multiclassPairs", build_vignettes = TRUE)
#}
# Install the dependencies from Bioconductor
# BiocManager, Biobase, and switchBox packages from Bioconductor are needed
if (!requireNamespace("BiocManager", quietly = TRUE)) {
install.packages("BiocManager")
}
if (!requireNamespace("Biobase", quietly = TRUE)) {
BiocManager::install("Biobase")
}
if (!requireNamespace("switchBox", quietly = TRUE)) {
BiocManager::install("switchBox")
}
## package 'switchBox' successfully unpacked and MD5 sums checked
##
## The downloaded binary packages are in
## C:\Users\no5462ma\AppData\Local\Temp\Rtmpcrl6DS\downloaded_packages
# load multiclassPairs library
library(multiclassPairs)
multiclassPairs
is summarized in the next figure:
The workflow always starts with ReadData
function. Then you have two schemes to train your pair-based classifier:
For more complex predictions, RF performs better. For less complex predictions, we recommend to use one-vs-rest due to its straightforward application and interpretation.
Both workflows begin by filtering the features, then combining the filtered features to make the list of all the possible rules (i.e. rule1: feature1 < feature2, rule2: feature1 < feature3, etc…). Then the list of rules will be filtered and the most important and informative rules will be kept. The informative rules will be assembled in an one-vs-rest model or in an RF model. We provide a detailed description for the methodologies for each step in the help files in the package.
ReadData
takes the data (data.frame/matrix/ExpressionSet) and class labels for the samples, then generates a data object to be used in the downstream steps, such as genes filtering, training, and visualization.
Optionally, ReadData
accepts additional platform/study labels and includes it in the data object when more than one platform/study are involved, this helps in performing the downstream steps in platform/study wise manner, where the filtering of the genes/rules is performed in the samples of each platform/study separately, then the top genes/rules in all of the platforms/studies are selected.
Here is an example of creating data object using a matrix:
library(multiclassPairs)
# example of creating data object from matrix
# we will generate fake data in this example
# matrix with random values
Data <- matrix(runif(10000),
nrow=100,
ncol=100,
dimnames = list(paste0("G",1:100),
paste0("S",1:100)))
# class labels
L1 <- sample(x = c("A","B","C"), size = 100, replace = TRUE)
# platform/study labels
P1 <- sample(x = c("P1","P2"), size = 100, replace = TRUE)
# create the data object
object <- ReadData(Data = Data,
Labels = L1,
Platform = P1,
verbose = FALSE)
object
## multiclassPairs object
## *Data:
## Number of samples: 100
## Number of genes/features: 100
## *Labels and Platforms:
## Classes: C B A
## Platforms/studies: P2 P1
## *Samples count table:
## A B C
## P1 17 15 15
## P2 12 23 18
Here is an example using leukemiasEset
data from Bioconductor packages, which is an Expressionset
containing gene expression data from 60 bone marrow samples of patients with one of the four main types of leukemia (ALL, AML, CLL, CML) or non-leukemia. Note that this example is just to show the functions and the options in the multiclassPairs
package. For a better comparison between the workflows and other tools see the comparison session in the end of this tutorial.
library(multiclassPairs, quietly = TRUE)
# install Leukemia cancers data
if (!requireNamespace("BiocManager", quietly = TRUE)){
install.packages("BiocManager")
}
if (!requireNamespace("leukemiasEset", quietly = TRUE)){
BiocManager::install("leukemiasEset")
}
# load the data package
library(leukemiasEset, quietly = TRUE)
data(leukemiasEset)
# check the Expressionset
leukemiasEset
## ExpressionSet (storageMode: lockedEnvironment)
## assayData: 20172 features, 60 samples
## element names: exprs, se.exprs
## protocolData
## sampleNames: GSM330151.CEL GSM330153.CEL ... GSM331677.CEL (60 total)
## varLabels: ScanDate
## varMetadata: labelDescription
## phenoData
## sampleNames: GSM330151.CEL GSM330153.CEL ... GSM331677.CEL (60 total)
## varLabels: Project Tissue ... Subtype (5 total)
## varMetadata: labelDescription
## featureData: none
## experimentData: use 'experimentData(object)'
## Annotation: genemapperhgu133plus2
# explore the phenotypes data
knitr::kable(head(pData(leukemiasEset)))
Project | Tissue | LeukemiaType | LeukemiaTypeFullName | Subtype | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
GSM330151.CEL | Mile1 | BoneMarrow | ALL | Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia | c_ALL/Pre_B_ALL without t(9 22) |
GSM330153.CEL | Mile1 | BoneMarrow | ALL | Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia | c_ALL/Pre_B_ALL without t(9 22) |
GSM330154.CEL | Mile1 | BoneMarrow | ALL | Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia | c_ALL/Pre_B_ALL without t(9 22) |
GSM330157.CEL | Mile1 | BoneMarrow | ALL | Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia | c_ALL/Pre_B_ALL without t(9 22) |
GSM330171.CEL | Mile1 | BoneMarrow | ALL | Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia | c_ALL/Pre_B_ALL without t(9 22) |
GSM330174.CEL | Mile1 | BoneMarrow | ALL | Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia | c_ALL/Pre_B_ALL without t(9 22) |
# We are interested in LeukemiaType
knitr::kable(table(pData(leukemiasEset)[,"LeukemiaType"]))
Var1 | Freq |
---|---|
ALL | 12 |
AML | 12 |
CLL | 12 |
CML | 12 |
NoL | 12 |
# split the data
# 60% as training data and 40% as testing data
n <- ncol(leukemiasEset)
set.seed(1234)
training_samples <- sample(1:n,size = n*0.6)
train <- leukemiasEset[1:1000,training_samples]
test <- leukemiasEset[1:1000,-training_samples]
# just to be sure there are no shared samples between the training and testing data
sum(sampleNames(test) %in% sampleNames(train)) == 0
## [1] TRUE
# create the data object
# when we use Expressionset we can use the name of the phenotypes variable
# ReadData will automatically extract the phenotype variable and use it as class labels
# the same can be used with the Platform/study labels
# in this example we are not using any platform labels, so leave it NULL
object <- ReadData(Data = train,
Labels = "LeukemiaType",
Platform = NULL,
verbose = FALSE)
object
## multiclassPairs object
## *Data:
## Number of samples: 36
## Number of genes/features: 1000
## *Labels and Platforms:
## Classes: CLL AML NoL CML ALL
## Platforms/studies: NULL
## *Samples count table:
## ALL AML CLL CML NoL
## 8 6 7 8 7
One-vs-rest scheme is composed from binary individual classifiers for each class (i.e. each class versus others). Each binary classifier votes (i.e. give a score) for the predicted sample, and the sample’s class is predicted based on the highest score.
For building a pair-based classifier with a one-vs-rest scheme,
we start by selecting top differentially expressed genes using the filter_genes_TSP
function. This reduces the number of gene combinations (rules) in the next steps. This function can perform the filtering in different ways and return the top differential expressed genes for each class.
filter_genes_TSP
function provides two options for gene filtering. Both options begins by ranking the data (i.e. in-sample ranking). The first option performs one-vs-rest comparison using Wilcoxon test and then selects a number of the top genes. Wilcoxon test is done separately for each class. The second option performs one-vs-one comparison using Dunn’s test, and then selects a number of the top genes. Dunn’s test is performed for all classes together.
Previous filtering options can be done for samples from each platform/study separately, then the top genes in all platforms/studies will be selected.
The reason for using one-vs-one gene filtering is to give more weight to small classes. The reason for using platform-wise gene filtering is to give more weight to platforms with small sample size, and to select genes that are important in all platforms/studies. However, one-vs-one and platform-wise options does not guarantee better results but they are valid options to be considered during the training process.
More details about the filtering process is mentioned in the documentation of filter_genes_TSP
function.
Here we will run a simple gene filtering example on the leukemiasEset
data.
# let's go with gene filtering using one_vs_one option
# for featureNo argument, a sufficient number of returned features is
# recommended if large number of rules is used in the downstream training steps.
filtered_genes <- filter_genes_TSP(data_object = object,
filter = "one_vs_one",
platform_wise = FALSE,
featureNo = 1000,
UpDown = TRUE,
verbose = TRUE)
filtered_genes
## sorted genes for One-vs-rest Scheme:
## Object contains:
## - filtered_genes
## - class: CLL : 554 genes
## - class: AML : 241 genes
## - class: NoL : 381 genes
## - class: CML : 440 genes
## - class: ALL : 378 genes
## - calls
## filter_genes_TSP(data_object = object,
## filter = "one_vs_one",
## platform_wise = FALSE,
## featureNo = 1000,
## UpDown = TRUE,
## verbose = TRUE)
We asked for 1000 filtered genes per class (i.e. featureNo
argument) but the filtered genes object has less than 1000 genes per class. This is because the function did not find enough genes matching the top genes criteria (i.e. high/low in the class and the opposite in the other classes).
To skip the step of filtering genes, one can create the filtering genes object with all available genes as in the next chunk. However, this significantly increases the training time.
# using the object that is generated by ReadData
# we can create genes object with all genes to skip filtering step
# Get the class names
classes <- unique(object$data$Labels)
# create empty genes object
genes_all <- list(OnevsrestScheme = list(filtered_genes = NULL,
calls = c()))
class(genes_all) <- "OnevsrestScheme_genes_TSP"
# prepare the slots for each class
tmp <- vector("list", length(classes))
names(tmp) <- classes
genes_all$OnevsrestScheme$filtered_genes <- tmp
genes_all$OnevsrestScheme$calls <- c()
genes_all
# fill the gene object in each slot
for (i in classes) {
genes_all$OnevsrestScheme$filtered_genes[[i]] <- rownames(object$data$Data)
}
# This is the gene object with all genes
genes_all
After filtering the genes, we can train our model using train_one_vs_rest_TSP
function. This function combines the filtered genes as binary rules (GeneA < GeneB, GeneA < GeneC, etc.) then rules are sorted based on their score, and the optimal number of rules among the input range (i.e. k_range
argument) is selected. The optimal number of rules is determined internally through the SWAP.Train.KTSP
function from switchBox
which uses Variance Optimization (VO) method as in (Afsari et al. 2014).
Rules scoring is performed by the traditional scoring method (Geman et al. 2004). Briefly, the score for a given rule equals the percentage of samples those are TRUE for the rule in the class minus the percentage of the samples those are TRUE for the rule in another group(s). train_one_vs_rest_TSP
function gives two scoring options: one-vs-rest and one-vs-one. In one-vs-rest scoring option, all the rest classes are grouped in one ‘rest’ group. In one-vs-one scoring option, the score is calculated as the mean of one-vs-one rule scores. The reason for using one-vs-one option is to give more weight to small classes.
Scores can also be calculated in a platform-wise manner where the score is calculated in each platform/study separately, then the mean of these scores will be the final score for the rule.
The k_range
argument defining the candidate number of top rules from which the algorithm chooses to build the binary classifier for each class.
Note that during prediction process (i.e. class voting) binary classifiers with low number of rules tie more than binary classifiers with higher number of rules. Because of that, it is recommended to use sufficient number of rules to avoid the score ties. Sufficient number of rules depends on how many classes we have and on how much these classes are distinct from each other.
Rules have two sides (i.e. GeneA < GeneB), usually rules are composed from two differently expressed genes (i.e. filtered genes). However, invariant genes (called pivot genes) can be involved in the rules through include_pivot
argument. If include_pivot
argument is TRUE, then the filtered genes will be combined with all genes in the data allowing rules in form of ‘filtered genes < pivot gene’ and ‘pivot gene < filtered genes’. This may increase the training time due to increase the number of the possible rules.
# Let's train our model
classifier <- train_one_vs_rest_TSP(data_object = object,
filtered_genes = filtered_genes,
k_range = 5:50,
include_pivot = FALSE,
one_vs_one_scores = TRUE,
platform_wise_scores = FALSE,
seed = 1234,
verbose = FALSE)
classifier
## multiclassPairs - One vs rest Scheme
## *Classifier:
## contains binary classifiers:
## - Class: CLL ... 24 rules
## - Class: AML ... 8 rules
## - Class: NoL ... 5 rules
## - Class: CML ... 5 rules
## - Class: ALL ... 7 rules
So, in our trained model we have 5 binary classifiers for the classes: CLL, AML, NoL, CML, ALL, with 24,8,5,5,7 rules, respectively.
Now, let’s apply our trained model on the training and testing data to assess its performance. We can do that through predict_one_vs_rest_TSP
function.
Note that, in some cases the testing data miss some features or genes, predict_one_vs_rest_TSP
can deal with this through ignoring the rules with missed genes. However, if a lot of rules are ignored the prediction may be affected to large extend.
predict_one_vs_rest_TSP
returns a data.frame with class scores, score ties, and final prediction based on the max score.
# apply on the training data
# To have the classes in output in specific order, we can use classes argument
results_train <- predict_one_vs_rest_TSP(classifier = classifier,
Data = object,
tolerate_missed_genes = TRUE,
weighted_votes = TRUE,
classes = c("ALL","AML","CLL","CML","NoL"),
verbose = TRUE)
# apply on the testing data
results_test <- predict_one_vs_rest_TSP(classifier = classifier,
Data = test,
tolerate_missed_genes = TRUE,
weighted_votes = TRUE,
classes=c("ALL","AML","CLL","CML","NoL"),
verbose = TRUE)
# get a look over the scores in the testing data
knitr::kable(head(results_test))
ALL | AML | CLL | CML | NoL | max_score | tie_flag | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
GSM330151.CEL | 0.2857157 | 0.1219990 | 0.4999986 | 0.0000000 | 0.0000000 | CLL | NA |
GSM330178.CEL | 0.5714304 | 0.1219990 | 0.0416651 | 0.2012551 | 0.1916289 | ALL | NA |
GSM330186.CEL | 1.0000000 | 0.0000000 | 0.0000000 | 0.0000000 | 0.0000000 | ALL | NA |
GSM330195.CEL | 0.8571444 | 0.1219951 | 0.0416651 | 0.0000000 | 0.0000000 | ALL | NA |
GSM330532.CEL | 0.2857131 | 0.8695936 | 0.0000000 | 0.0000000 | 0.1938418 | AML | NA |
GSM330571.CEL | 0.0000000 | 0.8780049 | 0.0416656 | 0.0000000 | 0.3854708 | AML | NA |
Let’s check the accuracy in the training and testing data.
# Confusion Matrix and Statistics on training data
caret::confusionMatrix(data = factor(results_train$max_score,
levels = unique(object$data$Labels)),
reference = factor(object$data$Labels,
levels = unique(object$data$Labels)),
mode="everything")
## Confusion Matrix and Statistics
##
## Reference
## Prediction CLL AML NoL CML ALL
## CLL 7 0 0 0 0
## AML 0 6 0 0 0
## NoL 0 0 7 0 0
## CML 0 0 0 8 0
## ALL 0 0 0 0 8
##
## Overall Statistics
##
## Accuracy : 1
## 95% CI : (0.9026, 1)
## No Information Rate : 0.2222
## P-Value [Acc > NIR] : < 2.2e-16
##
## Kappa : 1
##
## Mcnemar's Test P-Value : NA
##
## Statistics by Class:
##
## Class: CLL Class: AML Class: NoL Class: CML Class: ALL
## Sensitivity 1.0000 1.0000 1.0000 1.0000 1.0000
## Specificity 1.0000 1.0000 1.0000 1.0000 1.0000
## Pos Pred Value 1.0000 1.0000 1.0000 1.0000 1.0000
## Neg Pred Value 1.0000 1.0000 1.0000 1.0000 1.0000
## Precision 1.0000 1.0000 1.0000 1.0000 1.0000
## Recall 1.0000 1.0000 1.0000 1.0000 1.0000
## F1 1.0000 1.0000 1.0000 1.0000 1.0000
## Prevalence 0.1944 0.1667 0.1944 0.2222 0.2222
## Detection Rate 0.1944 0.1667 0.1944 0.2222 0.2222
## Detection Prevalence 0.1944 0.1667 0.1944 0.2222 0.2222
## Balanced Accuracy 1.0000 1.0000 1.0000 1.0000 1.0000
# Confusion Matrix and Statistics on testing data
caret::confusionMatrix(data = factor(results_test$max_score,
levels = unique(object$data$Labels)),
reference = factor(pData(test)[,"LeukemiaType"],
levels = unique(object$data$Labels)),
mode="everything")
## Confusion Matrix and Statistics
##
## Reference
## Prediction CLL AML NoL CML ALL
## CLL 5 1 0 0 1
## AML 0 5 0 0 0
## NoL 0 0 5 0 0
## CML 0 0 0 4 0
## ALL 0 0 0 0 3
##
## Overall Statistics
##
## Accuracy : 0.9167
## 95% CI : (0.73, 0.9897)
## No Information Rate : 0.25
## P-Value [Acc > NIR] : 9.084e-12
##
## Kappa : 0.8952
##
## Mcnemar's Test P-Value : NA
##
## Statistics by Class:
##
## Class: CLL Class: AML Class: NoL Class: CML Class: ALL
## Sensitivity 1.0000 0.8333 1.0000 1.0000 0.7500
## Specificity 0.8947 1.0000 1.0000 1.0000 1.0000
## Pos Pred Value 0.7143 1.0000 1.0000 1.0000 1.0000
## Neg Pred Value 1.0000 0.9474 1.0000 1.0000 0.9524
## Precision 0.7143 1.0000 1.0000 1.0000 1.0000
## Recall 1.0000 0.8333 1.0000 1.0000 0.7500
## F1 0.8333 0.9091 1.0000 1.0000 0.8571
## Prevalence 0.2083 0.2500 0.2083 0.1667 0.1667
## Detection Rate 0.2083 0.2083 0.2083 0.1667 0.1250
## Detection Prevalence 0.2917 0.2083 0.2083 0.1667 0.1250
## Balanced Accuracy 0.9474 0.9167 1.0000 1.0000 0.8750
So we got 100% overall accuracy in the training data and 92% overall accuracy in the testing data.
Finally it is recommended to visualize the rules in the training and testing data. This will give you an idea to which level the rules and predictions are good.
We can plot binary heatmap plots through plot_binary_TSP
function as follows:
# plot for the rules and scores in the training data
plot_binary_TSP(Data = object, # we are using the data object here
classifier = classifier,
prediction = results_train,
classes = c("ALL","AML","CLL","CML","NoL"),
#margin = c(0,5,0,10),
title = "Training data")
# plot for the rules and scores in the testing data
plot_binary_TSP(Data = test, # ExpressionSet
ref = "LeukemiaType", # ref label names in pData
classifier = classifier,
prediction = results_test,
classes = c("ALL","AML","CLL","CML","NoL"),
title = "Testing data"#,
#margin = c(0,5,0,10)
)
In Random Forest (RF) scheme, all steps of gene filtering/sorting, rule filtering/sorting, and final model training are performed using the RF algorithm.
The ranger
package is used to run the RF algorithm, and arguments can be passed to ranger
function if any changes are needed. For example, increasing the number of trees. Check the documentation of multiclassPairs
for more details.
To reduce the number of the genes, sort_genes_RF
function sorts the genes based on their importance and take the top important genes. Gene importance is determined based on the ability of the gene to split the classes better than other genes. Check ranger
package for more details.
To get the important (i.e. informative) genes sort_genes_RF
function performs two types of sorting genes, first type is “altogether” which runs the RF algorithm to sort the genes based on their importance in all classes from each other, this generates one list of sorted genes for the whole data. The second type is “one_vs_rest” which runs the RF algorithm to sort the genes based on their importance in splitting one class from the rest, this generates sorted list of genes for each class. It is recommended (default) to run both, particularly in case of class imbalance in the training data.
By default, all genes are sorted and returned, and the user can specify how many top genes will be used in the downstream functions. However, the user can specify how many genes should be returned using featureNo_altogether
and featureNo_one_vs_rest
arguments, and if one of these arguments is 0, then that sorting type will be skipped.
Like One-vs-rest scheme, platform-wise option is available for the Random Forest scheme where the genes and rules can be sorted in each platform/study individually then the top genes in all of them will be taken. This gives more weight to small platforms/studies and try to get genes that function equally well in all platforms/studies.
It is recommended to run all function in the RF scheme with seeds to get reproducible results each time.
Let us run gene sorting function for the previous leukemia training data. Note that the data is not ranked by default here, but you can rank the data (ex. in case you are using non-normalized data) before sorting the genes using rank_data
, the genes then will be ranked within each sample.
# (500 trees here just for fast example)
genes_RF <- sort_genes_RF(data_object = object,
# featureNo_altogether, it is better not to specify a number here
# featureNo_one_vs_rest, it is better not to specify a number here
rank_data = TRUE,
platform_wise = FALSE,
num.trees = 500, # more features, more tress are recommended
seed=123456, # for reproducibility
verbose = TRUE)
genes_RF # sorted genes object
## multiclassPairs - Random Forest scheme
## Object contains:
## - sorted_genes
## - class: all : 1000 genes
## - class: CLL : 1000 genes
## - class: AML : 1000 genes
## - class: NoL : 1000 genes
## - class: CML : 1000 genes
## - class: ALL : 1000 genes
## - RF_classifiers
## - calls
## sort_genes_RF(data_object = object,
## rank_data = TRUE,
## platform_wise = FALSE,
## num.trees = 500,
## verbose = TRUE,
## seed = 123456)
After we sorted the genes, we need to take the top genes and combine them as binary rules and then sort these rules. This can be performed using sort_rules_RF
function. Here, we need to determine how many top genes to use.
Like sorting genes options, rules sorting can be performed in “altogether”, “one_vs_rest”, and “platform_wise” options. By default, both “altogether” and “one_vs_rest” rule sorting are performed.
Parameter optimization:
The summary_genes_RF
function is an optional function in the workflow. summary_genes_RF
function gives an idea of how many genes you need to use to generate a specific number of rules.
The summary_genes_RF
function checks different values of genes_altogether
and genes_one_vs_rest
arguments in sort_rules_RF
function. summary_genes_RF
works as follows: take the first element in genes_altogether
and genes_one_vs_rest
arguments, then bring this number of top genes from altogether slot and one_vs_rest slots (this number of genes will be taken from each class), respectively, from the sorted_genes_RF object. Then pool the extracted genes and take the unique genes. Then calculate the number of the possible combinations. Store the number of unique genes and rules in first row in the output data.frame then pick the second element from the genes_altogether
and genes_one_vs_rest
and repeat the steps again. NOTE: gene replication in rules is not considered, because the rules are not sorted yet in the sorted_genes_RF object.
Another way, but computationally more extensive, is to use large and sufficient number of genes, this will produce large number of rules, then we can use run_boruta=TRUE
argument in the training function (i.e. train_RF
function), this will remove the uninformative rules before training the final model.
Let us run an example for summary_genes_RF
function to get an idea of how many genes we will use, then we run sort_rules_RF
function.
# to get an idea of how many genes we will use
# and how many rules will be generated
summary_genes <- summary_genes_RF(sorted_genes_RF = genes_RF,
genes_altogether = c(10,20,50,100,150,200),
genes_one_vs_rest = c(10,20,50,100,150,200))
knitr::kable(summary_genes)
genes_altogether_in_object | genes_1_vs_r_in_object | n_classes | from_altogether | from_one_vs_rest | n_unique_genes | n_rules |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1000 | 1000 | 5 | 10 | 10 | 50 | 1225 |
1000 | 1000 | 5 | 20 | 20 | 100 | 4950 |
1000 | 1000 | 5 | 50 | 50 | 229 | 26106 |
1000 | 1000 | 5 | 100 | 100 | 422 | 88831 |
1000 | 1000 | 5 | 150 | 150 | 579 | 167331 |
1000 | 1000 | 5 | 200 | 200 | 695 | 241165 |
# 50 genes_altogether and 50 genes_one_vs_rest seems
# to give enough number of rules and unique genes for our classes
# (500 trees here just for fast example)
# Now let's run sort_rules_RF to create the rules and sort them
rules_RF <- sort_rules_RF(data_object = object,
sorted_genes_RF = genes_RF,
genes_altogether = 50,
genes_one_vs_rest = 50,
num.trees = 500,# more rules, more tress are recommended
seed=123456,
verbose = TRUE)
rules_RF # sorted rules object
## multiclassPairs - Random Forest scheme
## Object contains:
## - sorted_genes
## - class: all : 50 genes
## - class: CLL : 50 genes
## - class: AML : 50 genes
## - class: NoL : 50 genes
## - class: CML : 50 genes
## - class: ALL : 50 genes
## - sorted_rules
## - class: all : 26106 sorted rules
## - class: CLL : 26106 sorted rules
## - class: AML : 26106 sorted rules
## - class: NoL : 26106 sorted rules
## - class: CML : 26106 sorted rules
## - class: ALL : 26106 sorted rules
## - RF_classifiers
## - calls
## sort_rules_RF(data_object = object,
## sorted_genes_RF = genes_RF,
## genes_altogether = 50,
## genes_one_vs_rest = 50,
## num.trees = 500,
## verbose = TRUE,
## seed = 123456)
Now, we have the rules sorted based on their importance. Now we can train our final RF model. We can go with the default settings in the train_RF
function directly or we can check some different parameters to optimize the training process by running optimize_RF
as in the next example:
# prepare the simple data.frame for the parameters I want to test
# names of arguments as column names
# this df has three sets (3 rows) of parameters
parameters <- data.frame(
gene_repetition=c(3,2,1),
rules_one_vs_rest=c(2,3,10),
rules_altogether=c(2,3,10),
run_boruta=c(FALSE,"make_error",TRUE), # I want to produce error in the 2nd trial
plot_boruta = FALSE,
num.trees=c(100,200,300),
stringsAsFactors = FALSE)
# parameters
# for overall and byclass possible options, check the help files
para_opt <- optimize_RF(data_object = object,
sorted_rules_RF = rules_RF,
parameters = parameters,
test_object = NULL,
overall = c("Accuracy","Kappa"), # wanted overall measurements
byclass = c("F1"), # wanted measurements per class
verbose = TRUE)
para_opt # results object
# para_opt$summary # the df of with summarized information
knitr::kable(para_opt$summary)
Here, the 3rd trial pronounced good accuracy.
It is recommend to run Boruta option (run_boruta=TRUE
) to remove the uniformative rules, thus use less genes and rules in the model. Note: When run_boruta=TRUE
the training process may take long time if the number of rules is large.
It is recommended to train the final model with probability=TRUE
, this will allow the model to give additional scores for each class instead of class prediction without scores.
We recommend that you visit the documentation of train_RF
and ranger
functions and to take a look over the different arguments and options there.
# train the final model
# it is preferred to increase the number of trees and rules in case you have
# large number of samples and features
# for quick example, we have small number of trees and rules here
# based on the optimize_RF results we will select the parameters
RF_classifier <- train_RF(data_object = object,
sorted_rules_RF = rules_RF,
gene_repetition = 1,
rules_altogether = 10,
rules_one_vs_rest = 10,
run_boruta = TRUE,
plot_boruta = FALSE,
probability = TRUE,
num.trees = 300,
boruta_args = list(),
verbose = TRUE)
## Classes
## ALL AML CLL CML NoL
## 8 6 7 8 7
Training data - quality check: From the trained model we can extract a proximity matrix which is based on the fraction of times any two given out-of-bag samples receive the same predicted label in each tree. This gives us a better overview of the predictor performance in the training data, and the behavior of our reference labels. We can generate heatmap for the proximity matrix by proximity_matrix_RF
function as follows:
# plot proximity matrix of the out-of-bag samples
# Note: this takes a lot of time if the data is big
proximity_matrix_RF(object = object,
classifier = RF_classifier,
plot = TRUE,
return_matrix = FALSE, # if we need to get the matrix itself
title = "Leukemias",
cluster_cols = TRUE)
For the training accuracy, we do not apply the RF model on the training data, because this gives 100% accuracy (almost always) which is not reliable. Instead we use the out-of-bag predictions, which can be obtained as follows:
# training accuracy
# get the prediction labels from the trained model
# if the classifier trained using probability = FALSE
training_pred <- RF_classifier$RF_scheme$RF_classifier$predictions
if (is.factor(training_pred)) {
x <- as.character(training_pred)
}
# if the classifier trained using probability = TRUE
if (is.matrix(training_pred)) {
x <- colnames(training_pred)[max.col(training_pred)]
}
# training accuracy
caret::confusionMatrix(data =factor(x),
reference = factor(object$data$Labels),
mode = "everything")
## Confusion Matrix and Statistics
##
## Reference
## Prediction ALL AML CLL CML NoL
## ALL 8 0 0 0 0
## AML 0 6 0 0 0
## CLL 0 0 7 0 0
## CML 0 0 0 8 0
## NoL 0 0 0 0 7
##
## Overall Statistics
##
## Accuracy : 1
## 95% CI : (0.9026, 1)
## No Information Rate : 0.2222
## P-Value [Acc > NIR] : < 2.2e-16
##
## Kappa : 1
##
## Mcnemar's Test P-Value : NA
##
## Statistics by Class:
##
## Class: ALL Class: AML Class: CLL Class: CML Class: NoL
## Sensitivity 1.0000 1.0000 1.0000 1.0000 1.0000
## Specificity 1.0000 1.0000 1.0000 1.0000 1.0000
## Pos Pred Value 1.0000 1.0000 1.0000 1.0000 1.0000
## Neg Pred Value 1.0000 1.0000 1.0000 1.0000 1.0000
## Precision 1.0000 1.0000 1.0000 1.0000 1.0000
## Recall 1.0000 1.0000 1.0000 1.0000 1.0000
## F1 1.0000 1.0000 1.0000 1.0000 1.0000
## Prevalence 0.2222 0.1667 0.1944 0.2222 0.1944
## Detection Rate 0.2222 0.1667 0.1944 0.2222 0.1944
## Detection Prevalence 0.2222 0.1667 0.1944 0.2222 0.1944
## Balanced Accuracy 1.0000 1.0000 1.0000 1.0000 1.0000
We predict the class in the test samples by running the predict_RF
function. Note that you can use impute = TRUE
to handle missed genes in the test data. This is done by filling the missed rule values based on the closest samples in the training data. RF models are good enough to handle large percent of missed rules (up to 50% in some cases) without large effect on the accuracy of the prediction.
# apply on test data
results <- predict_RF(classifier = RF_classifier,
Data = test,
impute = TRUE) # can handle missed genes by imputation
# get the prediction labels
# if the classifier trained using probability = FALSE
test_pred <- results$predictions
if (is.factor(test_pred)) {
x <- as.character(test_pred)
}
# if the classifier trained using probability = TRUE
if (is.matrix(test_pred)) {
x <- colnames(test_pred)[max.col(test_pred)]
}
# training accuracy
caret::confusionMatrix(data = factor(x),
reference = factor(pData(test)[,"LeukemiaType"]),
mode = "everything")
## Confusion Matrix and Statistics
##
## Reference
## Prediction ALL AML CLL CML NoL
## ALL 3 0 0 0 0
## AML 0 4 0 0 0
## CLL 1 1 5 0 0
## CML 0 1 0 4 0
## NoL 0 0 0 0 5
##
## Overall Statistics
##
## Accuracy : 0.875
## 95% CI : (0.6764, 0.9734)
## No Information Rate : 0.25
## P-Value [Acc > NIR] : 2.032e-10
##
## Kappa : 0.8435
##
## Mcnemar's Test P-Value : NA
##
## Statistics by Class:
##
## Class: ALL Class: AML Class: CLL Class: CML Class: NoL
## Sensitivity 0.7500 0.6667 1.0000 1.0000 1.0000
## Specificity 1.0000 1.0000 0.8947 0.9500 1.0000
## Pos Pred Value 1.0000 1.0000 0.7143 0.8000 1.0000
## Neg Pred Value 0.9524 0.9000 1.0000 1.0000 1.0000
## Precision 1.0000 1.0000 0.7143 0.8000 1.0000
## Recall 0.7500 0.6667 1.0000 1.0000 1.0000
## F1 0.8571 0.8000 0.8333 0.8889 1.0000
## Prevalence 0.1667 0.2500 0.2083 0.1667 0.2083
## Detection Rate 0.1250 0.1667 0.2083 0.1667 0.2083
## Detection Prevalence 0.1250 0.1667 0.2917 0.2083 0.2083
## Balanced Accuracy 0.8750 0.8333 0.9474 0.9750 1.0000
So we got 100% overall accuracy in the training data and 88% overall accuracy in the testing data.
plot_binary_RF
can be used to plot binary heatmaps for the rules in training and testing datasets, as follow:
#visualize the binary rules in training dataset
plot_binary_RF(Data = object,
classifier = RF_classifier,
prediction = NULL,
as_training = TRUE, # to extract the scores from the model
show_scores = TRUE,
top_anno = "ref",
show_predictions = TRUE,
#margin = c(0,5,0,8),
title = "Training data")
# visualize the binary rules in testing dataset
plot_binary_RF(Data = test,
ref = "LeukemiaType", # Get ref labels from the test ExpressionSet
classifier = RF_classifier,
prediction = results,
as_training = FALSE,
show_scores = TRUE,
top_anno = "ref",
show_predictions = TRUE,
title = "Testing data")
multiclassPairs
allows the user to select if the rules should be disjoint or not in the final model. This means if the gene is allowed to be repeated in the rules or not. For the one-vs-rest scheme, we pass the disjoint
argument to switchBox package to allow/prevent the gene repetition in the rules. In the random forest scheme, we give the user more control over the gene repetition where the gene_repetition
argument in the train_RF
function allows the user to determine how many times the gene is allowed to be repeated in the rules. When gene_repetition
= 1 the produced classifier will have disjointed rules.
Here, we compare the runtime and accuracy of the two schemes in multiclassPairs
(one-vs-rest and random forest) with the multiclass pair-based decision tree (DT) implementation in Rgtsp
package (Popovici et al., 2011).
We used the breast cancer training data ran the three approaches subsetting different training cohort sizes: 50, 100, 200, 500, 1000, and 1500 samples. The used settings in the three approaches are shown in the next chunk. We repeated the training process 5 times and recorded the training time for the full pipeline (i.e. gene and rule filtering and model training) and the accuracy. We used two different computational settings: 4 cores/64GB of RAMs and 24 cores/128GB of RAMs. The used test data contained (n=1634 samples).
We found that the DT models had the lowest accuracy and the highest training time regardless of the training dataset size (Figure 5). RF models with training sample sizes above 50 outperformed both one-vs-rest and the DT models (Figure 5). One-vs-rest models showed the lowest training time with the small training datasets, while RF approach showed the lowest training time in the model with 1500 training samples (Figure 6).
# For one-vs-rest scheme settings:
# one_vs_rest gene filtering with k_range of 10:50
object <- ReadData(Data = training_data,
Labels = Train_Classes)
filtered_genes <- filter_genes_TSP(data_object = object,
featureNo = 1000, UpDown = TRUE,
filter = "one_vs_rest")
classifier_1_vs_r <- train_one_vs_rest_TSP(data_object = object,
filtered_genes = filtered_genes,
k_range = 10:50, disjoint = TRUE,
include_pivot = FALSE,
platform_wise_scores = FALSE,
one_vs_one_scores = FALSE)
# For RF scheme settings:
# Settings represents a large model to show calculation time with high number of genes/rules
object <- ReadData(Data = training_data,
Labels = Train_Classes)
sorted_genes <- sort_genes_RF(object)
sorted_rules <- sort_rules_RF(data_object = object,
sorted_genes_RF = sorted_genes,
genes_altogether = 200,
genes_one_vs_rest = 200)
classifier_RF <- train_RF(data_object = object,
sorted_rules_RF = sorted_rules,
rules_one_vs_rest = 200,
rules_altogether = 200,
run_boruta = FALSE, gene_repetition = 1)
# For DT scheme from Rgtsp package:
# default settings with min.score=0.6 (to avoid running out of rules with the default setting 0.75)
#devtools::install_github("bioinfo-recetox/Rgtsp")
library(Rgtsp)
classifier_DT <- mtsp(X = t(as.matrix(training_data)),
y = Train_Classes,
min.score=0.60)
sessionInfo()
## R version 4.0.4 (2021-02-15)
## Platform: x86_64-w64-mingw32/x64 (64-bit)
## Running under: Windows 10 x64 (build 19042)
##
## Matrix products: default
##
## locale:
## [1] LC_COLLATE=C
## [2] LC_CTYPE=English_United States.1252
## [3] LC_MONETARY=English_United States.1252
## [4] LC_NUMERIC=C
## [5] LC_TIME=English_United States.1252
##
## attached base packages:
## [1] parallel stats graphics grDevices utils datasets methods
## [8] base
##
## other attached packages:
## [1] leukemiasEset_1.26.0 Biobase_2.50.0 BiocGenerics_0.36.1
## [4] multiclassPairs_0.4.3 knitr_1.33 BiocStyle_2.18.1
##
## loaded via a namespace (and not attached):
## [1] sass_0.4.0 switchBox_1.26.0 jsonlite_1.7.2
## [4] splines_4.0.4 foreach_1.5.1 gtools_3.8.2
## [7] prodlim_2019.11.13 bslib_0.2.5 assertthat_0.2.1
## [10] BiocManager_1.30.15 highr_0.9 stats4_4.0.4
## [13] yaml_2.2.1 ipred_0.9-11 pillar_1.6.1
## [16] lattice_0.20-44 glue_1.4.2 pROC_1.17.0.1
## [19] digest_0.6.27 colorspace_2.0-1 recipes_0.1.16
## [22] htmltools_0.5.1.1 Matrix_1.3-3 plyr_1.8.6
## [25] timeDate_3043.102 pkgconfig_2.0.3 magick_2.7.2
## [28] caret_6.0-86 bookdown_0.22 purrr_0.3.4
## [31] scales_1.1.1 ranger_0.12.1 gower_0.2.2
## [34] lava_1.6.9 tibble_3.1.1 proxy_0.4-25
## [37] generics_0.1.0 ggplot2_3.3.3 ellipsis_0.3.2
## [40] withr_2.4.2 Boruta_7.0.0 nnet_7.3-16
## [43] survival_3.2-11 magrittr_2.0.1 crayon_1.4.1
## [46] evaluate_0.14 fansi_0.4.2 gplots_3.1.1
## [49] nlme_3.1-152 MASS_7.3-54 class_7.3-19
## [52] dunn.test_1.3.5 tools_4.0.4 data.table_1.14.0
## [55] rdist_0.0.5 lifecycle_1.0.0 stringr_1.4.0
## [58] munsell_0.5.0 compiler_4.0.4 jquerylib_0.1.4
## [61] e1071_1.7-6 caTools_1.18.2 rlang_0.4.11
## [64] grid_4.0.4 iterators_1.0.13 bitops_1.0-7
## [67] rmarkdown_2.8 gtable_0.3.0 ModelMetrics_1.2.2.2
## [70] codetools_0.2-18 DBI_1.1.1 reshape2_1.4.4
## [73] R6_2.5.0 lubridate_1.7.10 dplyr_1.0.6
## [76] utf8_1.2.1 KernSmooth_2.23-20 stringi_1.6.1
## [79] Rcpp_1.0.6 vctrs_0.3.8 rpart_4.1-15
## [82] tidyselect_1.1.1 xfun_0.22
These binaries (installable software) and packages are in development.
They may not be fully stable and should be used with caution. We make no claims about them.