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. 2010 Nov 21;27(2):252–258. doi: 10.1093/bioinformatics/btq645

Table 1.

Results of the benchmark dataset: comparative analysis

Method classifier Our approach (SATuRNo) PC-based method
Partial PC-based method
Matisse method
IB1 C4.5 NB IB1 C4.5 NB IB1 C4.5 NB

Number of genes 34 29
79
20
Representative Acc. 90.9% 87.87% 78.78% 87.87% 93.93% 63.63% 84.84% 90.9% 87.87% 87.87%
Weighted Avg. TPR 0.90 0.87 0.78 0.87 0.93 0.63 0.84 0.90 0.87 0.87
Weighted Avg. FPR 0.08 0.16 0.24 0.13 0.06 0.39 0.15 0.14 0.13 0.13
Specificity 0.84 0.76 0.69 0.84 0.92 0.53 0.84 0.76 0.84 0.84
Sensitivity 0.95 0.95 0.85 0.90 0.95 0.70 0.85 1 0.90 0.90
AUC 0.89 0.86 0.70 0.91 0.937 0.64 0.92 0.88 0.94 0.93

We compared our approach to other published techniques on the basis of two tasks: network inference and classification using the inferred networks. For network inference, we applied a PC-based method (?), Partial PC-based method (De la Fuente et al., 2004) and the Matisse tool (Ulitsky and Shamir, 2007). After building class-specific networks, the genes involved in these networks were used as inputs to several classifiers: nearest neighbors (IB1), decision trees (C4.5 algorithm) and Naive Bayes classifiers. Several measures as representative accuracy, TPR, FPR, specificity, sensitivity and AUC values are shown. The representative accuracy is the proportion of correctly classified patients. The TPR and FPR are the weighted average true and positive rate. The specificity is the proportion of control patients, which were recognized as control category. The sensitivity is the proportion of disease patients, which were recognized as disease category. Finally, the AUC values represent the area under the receiver operating characteristic curve. Avg., average.