[BioC] GOHyperG stats question
Suraj Menon
menons1 at Cardiff.ac.uk
Thu Jul 19 12:55:01 CEST 2007
Thanks, Jim - that was quite useful.
Here is a little something for your amusement-
http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=946199
Cheers
-Suraj
>>> "James W. MacDonald" <jmacdon at med.umich.edu> 18/07/07 2:30 PM >>>
Hi Suraj,
Suraj Menon wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> Just a simple question on how GOHyperG calculates hypergeometric p-values -
> is the test one-tailed or two-tailed?
> and what would be the reason for using either of them?
The test is one-tailed. See ?HyperGParams-class, in particular the
testDirection slot.
In general you would want to use a one-tailed test because you are
testing a particular hypothesis (e.g., certain GO terms are
over-represented) rather than a more general hypothesis (e.g., certain
GO terms are represented at a level not consistent with their abundance
in the universe from which they were selected). In addition, a
one-tailed test will be more powerful.
I suppose one might want to do a two-tailed test if there really were no
hypothesis being tested, but instead the goal was to see "what's going
on" in a certain experimental system.
Best,
Jim
> Cheers,
>
>
> Suraj Menon
> PhD Student
> Department of Pathology
> Henry Wellcome Building
> School of Medicine
> Cardiff University
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> Cardiff CF14 4XN
>
> Tel: +44 29 2074 3979
> Email: MenonS1 at Cardiff.ac.uk
>
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--
James W. MacDonald
Affymetrix and cDNA Core
University of Michigan Cancer Center
1500 E. Medical Center Drive
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