Data integration and analysis for circadian medicine

Author:

Baum Lena1ORCID,Johns Marco1ORCID,Poikela Maija1ORCID,Möller Ralf2ORCID,Ananthasubramaniam Bharath3ORCID,Prasser Fabian1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Berlin Institute of Health at Charité‐Universitätsmedizin Berlin Berlin Germany

2. Institute of Information Systems University of Lübeck Lübeck Germany

3. Institute for Theoretical Biology Humboldt‐Universität zu Berlin Berlin Germany

Abstract

AbstractData integration, data sharing, and standardized analyses are important enablers for data‐driven medical research. Circadian medicine is an emerging field with a particularly high need for coordinated and systematic collaboration between researchers from different disciplines. Datasets in circadian medicine are multimodal, ranging from molecular circadian profiles and clinical parameters to physiological measurements and data obtained from (wearable) sensors or reported by patients. Uniquely, data spanning both the time dimension and the spatial dimension (across tissues) are needed to obtain a holistic view of the circadian system. The study of human rhythms in the context of circadian medicine has to confront the heterogeneity of clock properties within and across subjects and our inability to repeatedly obtain relevant biosamples from one subject. This requires informatics solutions for integrating and visualizing relevant data types at various temporal resolutions ranging from milliseconds and seconds to minutes and several hours. Associated challenges range from a lack of standards that can be used to represent all required data in a common interoperable form, to challenges related to data storage, to the need to perform transformations for integrated visualizations, and to privacy issues. The downstream analysis of circadian rhythms requires specialized approaches for the identification, characterization, and discrimination of rhythms. We conclude that circadian medicine research provides an ideal environment for developing innovative methods to address challenges related to the collection, integration, visualization, and analysis of multimodal multidimensional biomedical data.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Physiology

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