To Petabytes and beyond: recent advances in probabilistic and signal processing algorithms and their application to metagenomics

R. A. Leo Elworth(University of Houston), Qi Wang, Pavan K. Kota, CJ Barberan(Rice University), Benjamin Coleman(Rice University), Advait Balaji(University of Houston), Gaurav Gupta(Rice University), Richard G. Baraniuk(Rice University), Anshumali Shrivastava(University of Houston), Todd J. Treangen(University of Houston)
Nucleic Acids Research
April 4, 2020
Cited by 30Open Access
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Abstract

As computational biologists continue to be inundated by ever increasing amounts of metagenomic data, the need for data analysis approaches that keep up with the pace of sequence archives has remained a challenge. In recent years, the accelerated pace of genomic data availability has been accompanied by the application of a wide array of highly efficient approaches from other fields to the field of metagenomics. For instance, sketching algorithms such as MinHash have seen a rapid and widespread adoption. These techniques handle increasingly large datasets with minimal sacrifices in quality for tasks such as sequence similarity calculations. Here, we briefly review the fundamentals of the most impactful probabilistic and signal processing algorithms. We also highlight more recent advances to augment previous reviews in these areas that have taken a broader approach. We then explore the application of these techniques to metagenomics, discuss their pros and cons, and speculate on their future directions.


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