Evolving Multiobjective Cancer Subtype Diagnosis from Cancer Gene Expression Data

Research output: Journal Publications and Reviews (RGC: 21, 22, 62)21_Publication in refereed journalpeer-review

6 Scopus Citations
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Detail(s)

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2431-2444
Journal / PublicationIEEE/ACM Transactions on Computational Biology and Bioinformatics
Volume18
Issue number6
Online published18 Feb 2020
Publication statusPublished - Nov 2021

Abstract

Detection and diagnosis of cancer are especially essential for early prevention and effective treatments. Many studies have been proposed to tackle the subtype diagnosis problems with those data, which often suffer from low diagnostic ability and bad generalization. This article studies a multiobjective PSO-based hybrid algorithm (MOPSOHA) to optimize four objectives including the number of features, the accuracy, and two entropy-based measures: the relevance and the redundancy simultaneously, diagnosing the cancer data with high classification power and robustness. First, we propose a novel binary encoding strategy to choose informative gene subsets to optimize those objective functions. Second, a mutation operator is designed to enhance the exploration capability of the swarm. Finally, a local search method based on the 'best/1' mutation operator of differential evolutionary algorithm (DE) is employed to exploit the neighborhood area with sparse high-quality solutions since the base vector always approaches to some good promising areas. In order to demonstrate the effectiveness of MOPSOHA, it is tested on 41 cancer datasets including thirty-five cancer gene expression datasets and six independent disease datasets. Compared MOPSOHA with other state-of-the-art algorithms, the performance of MOPSOHA is superior to other algorithms in most of the benchmark datasets.

Research Area(s)

  • cancer subtype diagnosis, Classification, hybrid evolutionary optimization, multiobjective