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Background: The permutation test has been widely used to provide the p-values of statistical tests when the standard test statistics do not follow parametric null distributions. However, the permutation test may require huge numbers of iterations, especially when the detection of very small p-values is required for multiple testing adjustments in the analysis of datasets with a large number of features.
Objective: To overcome this computational burden, we suggest a novel enhanced adaptive permutation test that estimates p-values using the negative binomial (NB) distribution. By the method, the number of permutations are differently determined for individual features according to their potential significance.
Methods: In detail, the permutation procedure stops, when test statistics from the permuted dataset exceed the observed statistics from the original dataset by a predefined number of times. We showed that this procedure reduced the number of permutations especially when there were many insignificant features. For significant features, we enhanced the reduction with Stouffer's method after splitting datasets.
Results: From the simulation study, we found that the enhanced adaptive permutation test dramatically reduced the number of permutations while keeping the precision of the permutation p-value within a small range, when compared to the ordinary permutation test. In real data analysis, we applied the enhanced adaptive permutation test to a genome-wide single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) dataset of 327,872 features.
Conclusion: We found the analysis with the enhanced adaptive permutation took a feasible time for genome-wide omics datasets, and successfully identified features of highly significant p-values with reasonable confidence intervals.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s13258-024-01584-w | DOI Listing |
Risk Anal
September 2025
Integrated Sustainability Centre, Institute for Global Environmental Strategies, Hayama, Kanagawa, Japan.
Forest fires are integral to forest ecosystems as they influence nutrient cycling, plant regeneration, tree density, and biodiversity. However, human-induced climate change and activities have made forest fires more frequent, more intense, and more widespread, exacerbating their ecological and socioeconomic impact. Forest fires shape Tamil Nadu's diverse forest ecosystems, yet rising anthropogenic pressure and a warmer, drier climate have increased both their frequency and severity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJAMA Netw Open
September 2025
Faillace Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, McGovern Medical School, University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston, Houston.
Importance: Predicting treatment outcomes for internalizing psychopathologies (IPs), such as depression and anxiety, holds promise for advancing precision medicine. The extent to which whole-brain functional connectivity (FC) can predict treatment responses for patients with IPs across different therapeutic modalities remains unclear.
Objective: To examine whether pretreatment FC patterns predict multidimensional treatment outcomes in patients with IPs and whether predictive performance generalizes across diagnoses and treatment modalities.
bioRxiv
August 2025
Institute for Protein Design, University of Washington, Seattle, WA 98195, USA.
Self-assembling protein nanoparticles are being increasingly utilized in the design of next-generation vaccines due to their ability to induce antibody responses of superior magnitude, breadth, and durability. Computational protein design offers a route to novel nanoparticle scaffolds with structural and biochemical features tailored to specific vaccine applications. Although strategies for designing new self-assembling proteins have been established, the recent development of powerful machine learning-based tools for protein structure prediction and design provides an opportunity to overcome several of their limitations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTransl Vis Sci Technol
September 2025
Department of Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, AL, USA.
Purpose: Optical coherence tomography has become a widely used tool to assess structural changes at the optic nerve head and the peripapillary retina. Often, global analyses are supplemented with sectoral analyses, but it is unclear how to control specificity as trend analyses are conducted on a larger number of sectors. We introduce a random permutation analysis for a combined probability test of progression in circumpapillary retinal nerve fiber layer (cpRNFL) thickness applied to different number of sectors.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPrev Vet Med
August 2025
Université de Lyon, INRAE, VetAgro Sup, UMR EPIA, Marcy l'Etoile 69280, France; Université Clermont Auvergne, INRAE, VetAgro Sup, UMR EPIA, Saint Genes Champanelle 63122, France; Department of Pathobiology and Population Sciences, Royal Veterinary College, Hawkshead Lane, Hatfield AL9 7TA, UK.
In Norway, infectious salmon anemia (ISA) is a notifiable and economically important disease. Accurately understanding between-farm transmission remains essential for ISA control and prevention. Using a network approach, our objective was to assess whether ship movements could potentially contribute to the transmission of pathogenic variants of ISA virus (ISAV-HPRΔ) between farms.
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