WoS İndeksli Yayınlar Koleksiyonu
Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12573/394
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Article G-S a Prior Biological Knowledge-Based Pattern Detection and Enrichment Framework for Multi-Omics Data Integration(MDPI, 2025-11-29) Unlu Yazici, Miray; Bakir-Gungor, Burcu; Yousef, MalikThe rapid advancements in high-throughput technologies have led to a dramatic increase in diverse -omics data types, enabling comprehensive analyses, especially for complex diseases like cancer. Despite the development of multi-omics approaches, the challenges of scaling integration to massive, heterogeneous -omics datasets suggest that novel computational tools need to be designed. In this study, we propose an approach for integrating microRNA (miRNA) and messenger RNA (mRNA) expression data, incorporating prior biological knowledge (PBK). This approach scores and ranks groups of miRNAs and their associated genes using cross-validation iterations. The proposed method incorporates a Pattern detection (P) component to identify molecular motifs unique to each biological group. The analysis also facilitates the visualization of the groups, facilitating the identification of co-occurring groups and their characteristic features across iterations. Furthermore, the groups are scored using an over-representation analysis through a new Enrichment (E) component in each iteration. The clusters of the groups based on the Enrichment Scores (ESs) are visualized in a heatmap to obtain novel insights into the collective behavior and dependencies of the groups, aiming to understand the molecular mechanisms of complex diseases. The developed G-S-M-E tool not only provides performance metrics and biological scores at the group level but also offers comprehensive insights into intricate multi-omics interactions. In summary, our study emphasizes the importance of mathematical and data science methodologies in elucidating intricate multi-omics integration, yielding a formalized approach that deepens our comprehension of complex diseases.Conference Object Enhancing Complex Disease Group Scoring with Mirgedinet: A Multi-Algorithm Machine Learning Framework Based on the GSM Approach(IEEE, 2025-06-25) Qumsiyeh, Emma; Bakir-Gungor, Burcu; Yousef, MalikIntegrating biological prior knowledge for disease gene associations has shown significant promise in discovering new biomarkers with potential translational applications. This work investigates the application of a multi-algorithm machine learning framework based on the Grouping-Scoring-Modeling (G-S-M) approach for improving the prediction of complex diseases. The study identifies the primary gene and miRNA interactions in various complex diseases with the help of miRGediNET, which is a machine-learning based tool that integrates data from three biological databases. Traditional methods have only focused on independence between features; the G-S-M method focuses on aggregating genes based on biological interactions, pinpointing the scoring of gene groups for a disease, and modeling its predictive capability using advanced machine learning algorithms. In this research paper, seven algorithms, including Support Vector Machine, Decision Tree, and CatBoost, were applied to eight datasets extracted from the GEO database. This framework proved very robust in ranking gene clusters, thus predicting critical biomarkers while doing 100-fold randomized cross-validation within the evaluation. The results indicate this approach's high potential for refining disease and supporting research for choosing the best algorithm that can provide biological insights and computational advances.Correction Correction: Engineering Novel Features for Diabetes Complication Prediction Using Synthetic Electronic Health Records(Frontiers Media S.A., 2025-08-29) Voskergian, Daniel; Bakir-Gungor, Burcu; Yousef, MalikConference Object Exploring Microbiome Signatures in Autism Spectrum Disorder via Grouping-Scoring Based Machine Learning(IEEE, 2025-06-25) Temiz, Mustafa; Ersoz, Nur Sebnem; Yousef, Malik; Bakir-Gungor, BurcuThe rapid increase in omic data production increased the importance of machine learning (ML) methods to analze these data. In particular, the use of metagenomic data in the diagnosis, prognosis and treatment of diseases is becoming widespread. Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) is a neurodevelopmental disease that occurs in early childhood and continues lifelong. The aim of this study is to increase ML performance, reduce computational costs and achieve successful classification performance using a small number of metagenomic features. In addition, disease prediction is performed; ASD associated biomarkers are determined using the microBiomeGSM on metagenomic data. Classification is performed at three different taxonomic levels (genus, family and order) using the relative abundance values of species. The best performance metric (0.95 AUC) was obtained at the order taxonomic level using an average of 416 features with microBiomeGSM. The identified ASD-related taxonomic species are presented.Conference Object Citation - WoS: 1Citation - Scopus: 1Textnettopics-SFTS-SBTS Textnettopics Scoring Approaches Based Sequential Forward and Backward(Springer International Publishing AG, 2024) Voskergian, Daniel; Bakir-Gungor, Burcu; Yousef, MalikTextNetTopics is a text classification-based topic modeling approach that performs topic selection rather than word selection to train a machine learning algorithm. However, one main limitation of TextNetTopics is that its scoring component (the S component) assesses each topic independently and ranks them accordingly, neglecting the potential relationship between topics. In order to address this limitation and improve the classification performance, this study introduces an enhancement to TextNetTopics. TextNetTopics-SFTS-SBTS integrates two novel scoring approaches: Sequential Forward Topic Scoring (SFTS) and Sequential Backward Topic Scoring (SBTS), which consider topic interactions by assessing sets of topics simultaneously. This integration aims to streamline the topic selection process and enhance classifier efficiency for text classification. The results obtained across three datasets offer valuable insights into the context-dependent effectiveness of the new scoring mechanisms across diverse datasets and varying numbers of topics involved in the analysis.Conference Object TextNetTopics+: Enhancing Text Classification Through Classifier Diversity and Model Ensembling(Springer International Publishing AG, 2025) Voskergian, Daniel; Bakir-Gungor, Burcu; Yousef, MalikTextNetTopics is an innovative text classification framework that integrates topic modeling with feature selection to improve model accuracy and interpretability. Unlike traditional methods that rely on individual words, TextNetTopics selects cohesive topics extracted via Latent Dirichlet Allocation as features for document representation, effectively reducing dimensionality while preserving the semantic structure of the text. This study evaluates the performance of TextNetTopics utilizing multiple machine learning algorithms in the M (Modeling) component, including Random Forest, Support Vector Machine, Gradient Boosting, eXtreme Gradient Boosting, and Logistic Regression. To further enhance classification performance, we introduce TextNetTopics+, an ensemblebased extension that leverages both hard voting and soft voting mechanisms to combine the strengths of multiple classifiers. Comprehensive experiments on the LitCovid and WOS datasets demonstrate that ensemble learning in TextNetTopics + significantly outperforms individual classifiers in TextNetTopics, confirming its effectiveness in improving model robustness and generalization.Conference Object Citation - Scopus: 1Semant - Feature Group Selection Utilizing Fasttext-Based Semantic Word Grouping, Scoring, and Modeling Approach for Text Classification(Springer International Publishing AG, 2024) Voskergian, Daniel; Bakir-Gungor, Burcu; Yousef, MalikText classification presents a challenge due to its high-dimensional feature space. As such, devising an effective feature selection scheme is essential. In this study, we present SEMANT, a novel hybrid filter-wrapper feature selection method that utilizes filter-based Chi-Square and the wrapper-based G-S-M approach. SEMANT incorporates fastText neural word embedding similarities to promote greater semantic inclusion in the selection of features for text classification tasks. The performance of the proposed method was investigated on the WOS-5736 and LitCovid datasets and compared with TextNetTopics, a topic modeling-based topic selection algorithm for text classification. Experimental results confirm that the proposed approach outperforms its alternative.Article Citation - WoS: 2Citation - Scopus: 4RCE-IFE: Recursive Cluster Elimination With Intra-Cluster Feature Elimination(PeerJ Inc, 2025-02-07) Kuzudisli, Cihan; Bakir-Gungor, Burcu; Qaqish, Bahjat; Yousef, MalikThe computational and interpretational difficulties caused by the ever-increasing dimensionality of biological data generated by new technologies pose a significant challenge. Feature selection (FS) methods aim to reduce the dimension, and feature grouping has emerged as a foundation for FS techniques that seek to detect strong correlations among features and identify irrelevant features. In this work, we propose the Recursive Cluster Elimination with Intra-Cluster Feature Elimination (RCE-IFE) method that utilizes feature grouping and iterates grouping and elimination steps in a supervised context. We assess dimensionality reduction and discriminatory capabilities of RCE-IFE on various high-dimensional datasets from different biological domains. For a set of gene expression, MicroRNA (miRNA) expression, and methylation datasets, the performance of RCE-IFE is comparatively evaluated with RCE-IFE-SVM (the SVM-adapted version of RCE-IFE) and SVM-RCE. On average, RCE-IFE attains an area under the curve (AUC) of 0.85 among tested expression datasets with the fewest features and the shortest running time, while RCE-IFE-SVM (the SVM-adapted version of RCE-IFE) and SVM-RCE achieve similar AUCs of 0.84 and 0.83, respectively. RCE-IFE and SVM-RCE yield AUCs of 0.79 and 0.68, respectively when averaged over seven different metagenomics datasets, with RCE-IFE significantly reducing feature subsets. Furthermore, RCE-IFE surpasses several state-of-the-art FS methods, such as Minimum Redundancy Maximum Relevance (MRMR), Fast Correlation-Based Filter (FCBF), Information Gain (IG), Conditional Mutual Information Maximization (CMIM), SelectKBest (SKB), and eXtreme Gradient Boosting (XGBoost), obtaining an average AUC of 0.76 on five gene expression datasets. Compared with a similar tool, Multi-stage, RCE-IFE gives a similar average accuracy rate of 89.27% using fewer features on four cancer-related datasets. The comparability of RCE-IFE is also verified with other biological domain knowledge-based Grouping-Scoring-Modeling (G-S-M) tools, including mirGediNET, 3Mint, and miRcorrNet. Additionally, the biological relevance of the selected features by RCE-IFE is evaluated. The proposed method also exhibits high consistency in terms of the selected features across multiple runs. Our experimental findings imply that RCE-IFE provides robust classifier performance and significantly reduces feature size while maintaining feature relevance and consistency.Conference Object Citation - WoS: 1Citation - Scopus: 1Prediction of Type 2 Diabetes Using Metagenomic Data and Identification of Taxonomic Biomarkers(IEEE, 2024-05-15) Temiz, Mustafa; Kuzudisli, Cihan; Yousef, Malik; Bakir-Gungor, BurcuNowadays, different molecular levels of -omics data on diseases are generated and analyzing these data with machine learning methods is one of the popular research topics. Among these data, the use of metagenomic data to facilitate the diagnosis, detection and treatment of diseases is increasing day by day. Type 2 diabetes (T2D) is a chronic disease characterized by insulin resistance and progressive dysfunction of pancreatic beta cells. While the number of people with diabetes is increasing by around 8% annually, the cost of treating the disease is rising by 18% per year. Therefore, the number of studies on the diagnosis, development and progression of T2D is increasing over time. The aim of this study is to achieve higher machine learning performance by using fewer metagenomic features and to achieve better classification performance by reducing computational costs. In this study, we compare the performance of three different methods using T2D-related metagenomic data. First, the MetaPhlAn tool is used to calculate the taxonomic species and their relative abundances in each sample. The SVM-RCE, RCE-IFE and microBiomeGSM tools used in this study are methods that perform classification by grouping and scoring features and are known to work well on complex datasets. In this study, the best results were obtained with the RCE-IFE tool with an AUC of 0.72 with an average of 125 features information. In addition, key taxonomic species identified by these tools as associated with T2D are presented in comparison to the literature.Article Citation - WoS: 5Citation - Scopus: 5Novel Antimicrobial Peptide Design Using Motif Match Score Representation(IEEE Computer Soc, 2024-11) Soylemez, Ummu Gulsum; Yousef, Malik; Kesmen, Zulal; Bakir-Gungor, BurcuAntimicrobial peptides (AMPs) have drawn the interest of the researchers since they offer an alternative to the traditional antibiotics in the fight against antibiotic resistance and they exhibit additional pharmaceutically significant properties. Recently, computational approaches attemp to reveal how antibacterial activity is determined from a machine learning perspective and they aim to search and find the biological cues or characteristics that control antimicrobial activity via incorporating motif match scores. This study is dedicated to the development of a machine learning framework aimed at devising novel antimicrobial peptide (AMP) sequences potentially effective against Gram-positive/Gram-negative bacteria. In order to design newly generated sequences classified as either AMP or non-AMP, various classification models were trained. These novel sequences underwent validation utilizing the "DBAASP: strain-specific antibacterial prediction based on machine learning approaches and data on AMP sequences" tool. The findings presented herein represent a significant stride in this computational research, streamlining the process of AMP creation or modification within wet lab environments.
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