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Abstract

High-throughput gene expression data have been extensively generated and utilized in biological mechanism investigations, biomarker detection, disease diagnosis and prognosis. These applications encompass not only bulk transcriptome, but also single cell RNA-seq data. However, extracting reliable biological information from transcriptome data remains challenging due to the constrains of Compositional Data Analysis. Current data preprocessing methods, including dataset normalization and batch effect correction, are insufficient to address these issues and improve data quality for downstream analysis. Alternatively, qualification methods focusing on the relative order of gene expression (ROGER) are more informative than the quantification methods that rely on gene expression abundance. The Pairwise Analysis of Gene expression method is an enhancement of ROGER, designed for data integration in either sample space or feature space. In this review, we summarize the methods applied to transcriptome data analysis and discuss their potentials in predicting clinical outcomes.

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Title
Less is more: relative rank is more informative than absolute abundance for compositional NGS data
Author
Zheng, Xubin 1   VIAFID ORCID Logo  ; Jin, Nana 2 ; Wu, Qiong 3 ; Zhang, Ning 4 ; Wu, Haonan 5 ; Wang, Yuanhao 6 ; Luo, Rui 7 ; Liu, Tao 8 ; Ding, Wanfu 9 ; Geng, Qingshan 10 ; Cheng, Lixin 11   VIAFID ORCID Logo 

 https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2322-857X [email protected] Guangdong Provincial Clinical Research Center for Geriatrics, Shenzhen Clinical Research Center for Geriatrics, Shenzhen People’s Hospital, Luohu District, Shenzhen 518020, China; Health Data Science Center, Shenzhen People's Hospital (First Affiliated Hospital of Southern University of Science and Technology), Luohu District, Shenzhen 518020, China; School of Computing and Information Technology, Great Bay University, Dongguan 523000, Guangdong, China  [email protected]
 [email protected] Guangdong Provincial Clinical Research Center for Geriatrics, Shenzhen Clinical Research Center for Geriatrics, Shenzhen People’s Hospital, Luohu District, Shenzhen 518020, China; Health Data Science Center, Shenzhen People's Hospital (First Affiliated Hospital of Southern University of Science and Technology), Luohu District, Shenzhen 518020, China  [email protected]
 [email protected] School of Basic Medicine, North Sichuan Medical College, Nanchong 637000, Sichuan, China  [email protected]
 [email protected] Guangdong Provincial Clinical Research Center for Geriatrics, Shenzhen Clinical Research Center for Geriatrics, Shenzhen People’s Hospital, Luohu District, Shenzhen 518020, China; Health Data Science Center, Shenzhen People's Hospital (First Affiliated Hospital of Southern University of Science and Technology), Luohu District, Shenzhen 518020, China  [email protected]
 [email protected] Guangdong Provincial Clinical Research Center for Geriatrics, Shenzhen Clinical Research Center for Geriatrics, Shenzhen People’s Hospital, Luohu District, Shenzhen 518020, China; Health Data Science Center, Shenzhen People's Hospital (First Affiliated Hospital of Southern University of Science and Technology), Luohu District, Shenzhen 518020, China  [email protected]
 [email protected] Guangdong Provincial Clinical Research Center for Geriatrics, Shenzhen Clinical Research Center for Geriatrics, Shenzhen People’s Hospital, Luohu District, Shenzhen 518020, China; Health Data Science Center, Shenzhen People's Hospital (First Affiliated Hospital of Southern University of Science and Technology), Luohu District, Shenzhen 518020, China  [email protected]
 [email protected] Department of Systems Engineering, City University of Hong Kong, Kowloon, Hong Kong SAR  [email protected]
 [email protected] International Digital Economy Academy (IDEA), Futian District, Shenzhen 518020, China  [email protected]
 [email protected] Guangdong Provincial Clinical Research Center for Geriatrics, Shenzhen Clinical Research Center for Geriatrics, Shenzhen People’s Hospital, Luohu District, Shenzhen 518020, China  [email protected]
10  [email protected] Guangdong Provincial Clinical Research Center for Geriatrics, Shenzhen Clinical Research Center for Geriatrics, Shenzhen People’s Hospital, Luohu District, Shenzhen 518020, China  [email protected]
11  https://orcid.org/0000-0002-9427-383X [email protected] Guangdong Provincial Clinical Research Center for Geriatrics, Shenzhen Clinical Research Center for Geriatrics, Shenzhen People’s Hospital, Luohu District, Shenzhen 518020, China; Health Data Science Center, Shenzhen People's Hospital (First Affiliated Hospital of Southern University of Science and Technology), Luohu District, Shenzhen 518020, China  [email protected]
Publication title
Volume
24
Number of pages
8
Publication year
2025
Publication date
2025
Section
Review Paper
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Place of publication
Oxford
Country of publication
United Kingdom
Publication subject
ISSN
20412649
e-ISSN
20412657
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
Document type
Journal Article
Publication history
 
 
Online publication date
2024-11-20
Milestone dates
2024-07-09 (Received); 2024-10-24 (Rev-Recd); 2024-11-08 (Accepted)
Publication history
 
 
   First posting date
20 Nov 2024
ProQuest document ID
3268183202
Document URL
https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/less-is-more-relative-rank-informative-than/docview/3268183202/se-2?accountid=208611
Copyright
© 2025 The Author(s) 2024. Published by Oxford University Press. This work is published under https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (the "License"). Notwithstanding the ProQuest Terms and Conditions, you may use this content in accordance with the terms of the License.
Last updated
2025-12-02
Database
ProQuest One Academic