Kristiina Ausmees: Methodology and Infrastructure for Statistical Computing in Genomics: Applications for Ancient DNA
- Datum: 8 juni 2022, kl. 10.15
- Plats: 101121, Lägerhyddsvägen 1, Uppsala
- Typ: Disputation
- Respondent: Kristiina Ausmees
- Opponent: Flora Jay
- Handledare: Carl Nettelblad, Mattias Jakobsson
- Forskningsämne: Beräkningsvetenskap
- DiVA
Abstract
This thesis concerns the development and evaluation of computational methods for analysis of genetic data. A particular focus is on ancient DNA recovered from archaeological finds, the analysis of which has contributed to novel insights into human evolutionary and demographic history, while also introducing new challenges and the demand for specialized methods.
A main topic is that of imputation, or the inference of missing genotypes based on observed sequence data. We present results from a systematic evaluation of a common imputation pipeline on empirical ancient samples, and show that imputed data can constitute a realistic option for population-genetic analyses. We also develop a tool for genotype imputation that is based on the full probabilistic Li and Stephens model for haplotype frequencies and show that it can yield improved accuracy on particularly challenging data.
Another central subject in genomics and population genetics is that of data characterization methods that allow for visualization and exploratory analysis of complex information. We discuss challenges associated with performing dimensionality reduction of genetic data, demonstrating how the use of principal component analysis is sensitive to incomplete information and performing an evaluation of methods to handle unobserved genotypes. We also discuss the use of deep learning models as an alternative to traditional methods of data characterization in genomics and propose a framework based on convolutional autoencoders that we exemplify on the applications of dimensionality reduction and genetic clustering.
In genomics, as in other fields of research, increasing sizes of data sets are placing larger demands on efficient data management and compute infrastructures. The final part of this thesis addresses the use of cloud resources for facilitating data analysis in scientific applications. We present two different cloud-based solutions, and exemplify them on applications from genomics.