1 / 12

Ontology Annotation Treebrowser tool (OAT)

Ontology Annotation Treebrowser tool (OAT). Getting started. OAT - How to start a session. Click hear to go to input page. OAT - Input form. 2. Choose ontology. 1. Paste your probe sets here. 3. Press Submit button. OAT – Browsing (1).

hester
Télécharger la présentation

Ontology Annotation Treebrowser tool (OAT)

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Ontology Annotation Treebrowser tool (OAT) Getting started

  2. OAT - How to start a session Click hear to go to input page.

  3. OAT - Input form 2. Choose ontology 1. Paste your probe sets here 3. Press Submit button

  4. OAT – Browsing (1) First number tells you how many probe sets you submitted. Second number tells you how many of the probes sets was annotated to the ontology. Following the hyperlinked number generates a list of the probe sets.

  5. OAT – Browsing (2) By pressing”[+]” in front of a keyword, the associated children of the keyword are displayed.

  6. OAT – Browsing (3) This indicates that two genes are annotated at this level and bellow. This indicates that two genes are annotated directly at this level. This indicates that three keyword-annotations can be found at this level and bellow. The definition of the keyword is linked into E-lab/SRS. Let us look closer on a node in the ontology tree

  7. OAT – Browsing (4) The number of submitted probe sets affects the probability: more probes increase the chance of an annotation. The level of significance of an direct annotation is given by the probability of that this annotation occurs by chance. This example from the MeSH tree illustrates that Enzyme Activation have a low probability (2.8%) and is therefore significant, but Molecular Sequence Data have a very high probability (98,6%) and should therefore be present in almost every analysis.

  8. OAT – Report (1) Continue to expand and contract the nodes in the tree, until a satisfying level of details are reached. The next step is to summarize the interesting parts in a report.

  9. OAT – Report (2) In our example we are interested of Fibroblasts, Enivronment and Public Health and Physics. Choose if you want your report based on genes or annotated- keywords in the dropdown meny. Then press the grey button. To make a report of the most interesting keyword-annotations, just mark the checkboxes.

  10. OAT – Report (3) At the top of the report general information of your submission can be found. Bellow a list of tables is found, one for each keyword that was checked.

  11. OAT – Report (4) A hyperlink to the definition of the keyword. A hyperlink to HG_U95 database. The source of the annotation A hyperlink to the reference of the annotation. The elements of the Report-table

  12. OAT – Further information You can now consider your self trained on the OAT-tool. Enjoy it. Anders Bresell will gladly answer any remaining question. (e.g. ”What data is used?”, ”I still doesn’t get the part of significance?” or ”What programming language was used?” ) Any suggestions of improvements are also welcomed. E-mail: anders.bresell@astrazeneca.com

More Related