2 resultados para ARRAY-BASED TECHNOLOGY
em Illinois Digital Environment for Access to Learning and Scholarship Repository
Resumo:
The protein lysate array is an emerging technology for quantifying the protein concentration ratios in multiple biological samples. It is gaining popularity, and has the potential to answer questions about post-translational modifications and protein pathway relationships. Statistical inference for a parametric quantification procedure has been inadequately addressed in the literature, mainly due to two challenges: the increasing dimension of the parameter space and the need to account for dependence in the data. Each chapter of this thesis addresses one of these issues. In Chapter 1, an introduction to the protein lysate array quantification is presented, followed by the motivations and goals for this thesis work. In Chapter 2, we develop a multi-step procedure for the Sigmoidal models, ensuring consistent estimation of the concentration level with full asymptotic efficiency. The results obtained in this chapter justify inferential procedures based on large-sample approximations. Simulation studies and real data analysis are used to illustrate the performance of the proposed method in finite-samples. The multi-step procedure is simpler in both theory and computation than the single-step least squares method that has been used in current practice. In Chapter 3, we introduce a new model to account for the dependence structure of the errors by a nonlinear mixed effects model. We consider a method to approximate the maximum likelihood estimator of all the parameters. Using the simulation studies on various error structures, we show that for data with non-i.i.d. errors the proposed method leads to more accurate estimates and better confidence intervals than the existing single-step least squares method.
Resumo:
The goal of this study is to better simulate microscopic and voxel-based dynamic contrast enhancement in magnetic resonance imaging. Specifically, errors imposed by the traditional two-compartment model are reduced by introducing a novel Krogh cylinder network. The two-compartment model was developed for macroscopic pharmacokinetic analysis of dynamic contrast enhancement and generalizing it to voxel dimensions, due to the significant decrease in scale, imposes physiologically unrealistic assumptions. In the project, a system of microscopic exchange between plasma and extravascular-extracellular space is built while numerically simulating the local contrast agent flow between and inside image elements. To do this, tissue parameter maps were created, contrast agent was introduced to the tissue via a flow lattice, and various data sets were simulated. The effects of sources, tissue heterogeneity, and the contribution of individual tissue parameters to an image are modeled. Further, the study attempts to demonstrate the effects of a priori flow maps on image contrast, indicating that flow data is as important as permeability data when analyzing tumor contrast enhancement. In addition, the simulations indicate that it may be possible to obtain tumor-type diagnostic information by acquiring both flow and permeability data.