TinGa: fast and flexible trajectory inference with Growing Neural Gas

Author:

Todorov Helena123,Cannoodt Robrecht12,Saelens Wouter12,Saeys Yvan12

Affiliation:

1. Department of Applied Mathematics, Computer Science and Statistics, Ghent University, Ghent 9000, Belgium

2. Data Mining and Modeling for Biomedicine, VIB Center for Inflammation Research, Ghent 9052, Belgium

3. Centre International de recherche en Infectiologie, Université de Lyon, INSERM U1111, CNRS UMR 5308, Ecole Normale Supérieure de Lyon, Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1, 69007 Lyon, France

Abstract

AbstractMotivationDuring the last decade, trajectory inference (TI) methods have emerged as a novel framework to model cell developmental dynamics, most notably in the area of single-cell transcriptomics. At present, more than 70 TI methods have been published, and recent benchmarks showed that even state-of-the-art methods only perform well for certain trajectory types but not others.ResultsIn this work, we present TinGa, a new TI model that is fast and flexible, and that is based on Growing Neural Graphs. We performed an extensive comparison of TinGa to five state-of-the-art methods for TI on a set of 250 datasets, including both synthetic as well as real datasets. Overall, TinGa improves the state-of-the-art by producing accurate models (comparable to or an improvement on the state-of-the-art) on the whole spectrum of data complexity, from the simplest linear datasets to the most complex disconnected graphs. In addition, TinGa obtained the fastest execution times, showing that our method is thus one of the most versatile methods up to date.Availability and implementationR scripts for running TinGa, comparing it to top existing methods and generating the figures of this article are available at https://github.com/Helena-todd/TinGa.

Funder

Onderzoeksprogramma Artificiële Intelligentie

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Computational Mathematics,Computational Theory and Mathematics,Computer Science Applications,Molecular Biology,Biochemistry,Statistics and Probability

Reference20 articles.

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