Statistical and Machine Learning Techniques in Human Microbiome Studies: Contemporary Challenges and Solutions
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2021Author
Bakir-Gungor, BurcuMoreno-Indias, Isabel
Lahti, Leo
Nedyalkova, Miroslava
Elbere, Ilze
Roshchupkin, Gennady
Adilovic, Muhamed
Aydemir, Onder
Santa Pau, Enrique Carrillo-de
D'Elia, Domenica
Desai, Mahesh S.
Falquet, Laurent
Gundogdu, Aycan
Hron, Karel
Klammsteiner, Thomas
Lopes, Marta B.
Marcos-Zambrano, Laura Judith
Marques, Claudia
Mason, Michael
May, Patrick
Pasic, Lejla
Pio, Gianvito
Pongor, Sandor
Promponas, Vasilis J.
Przymus, Piotr
Saez-Rodriguez, Julio
ampri, Alexia
Shigdel, Rajesh
Stres, Blaz
Suharoschi, Ramona
Truu, Jaak
Truica, Ciprian-Octavian
Vilne, Baiba
Vlachakis, Dimitrios
Yilmaz, Ercument
Zeller, Georg
Zomer, Aldert L.
Gomez-Cabrero, David
Claesson, Marcus J.
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The human microbiome has emerged as a central research topic in human biology and biomedicine. Current microbiome studies generate high-throughput omics data across different body sites, populations, and life stages. Many of the challenges in microbiome research are similar to other high-throughput studies, the quantitative analyses need to address the heterogeneity of data, specific statistical properties, and the remarkable variation in microbiome composition across individuals and body sites. This has led to a broad spectrum of statistical and machine learning challenges that range from study design, data processing, and standardization to analysis, modeling, cross-study comparison, prediction, data science ecosystems, and reproducible reporting. Nevertheless, although many statistics and machine learning approaches and tools have been developed, new techniques are needed to deal with emerging applications and the vast heterogeneity of microbiome data. We review and discuss emerging applications of statistical and machine learning techniques in human microbiome studies and introduce the COST Action CA18131 "ML4Microbiome" that brings together microbiome researchers and machine learning experts to address current challenges such as standardization of analysis pipelines for reproducibility of data analysis results, benchmarking, improvement, or development of existing and new tools and ontologies.