-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 12
New issue
Have a question about this project? Sign up for a free GitHub account to open an issue and contact its maintainers and the community.
By clicking “Sign up for GitHub”, you agree to our terms of service and privacy statement. We’ll occasionally send you account related emails.
Already on GitHub? Sign in to your account
some problem about Genome doublings #23
Comments
@LongpanUPC Thanks. I basically don't modify any code regarding the computation. Could you share the ABSOLUTE version and source you used? Go further, if you have more time, could you help me check the difference between results from the ABSOLUTE you are using and the ABSOLUTE inside the this repository (https://github.com/ShixiangWang/DoAbsolute/blob/master/inst/extdata/ABSOLUTE_1.0.6.tar.gz) with same ABSOLUTE commands and parameters? This can clarify the position with problem. |
@ShixiangWang ,Hi Shixiang, Sorry for late reply. thank you very much! |
@LongpanUPC Thank you in advance :). Currently, I have no idea why there is so much difference. |
This maybe due to the conflicts between ubuntu openblas or Intel-blas and ABSOLUTE. I have integrated ABSOLUTE for personal usage in https://github.com/Yunuuuu/biomisc/blob/main/R/run_absolute.R which is modified from I finally decided to run in sequential normal process, as ABSOLUTE can utilize multiple cores though I cannot have much power to adjust to the core number. |
Hi @Yunuuuu, thanks for your response on this topic and the deep exploration. It helps clarify the mysterious results I never thought could be. I will include this in the README and thank both of you. |
Dear Shixiang,
thank you very much for creating a useful wrapper to run Absolute. However, I found there may be a problem on colunm "genome doubling" in the final table file. For instance, all the results are 0 in TCGA-LIHC cohort, which menas that there is no genome doubling in this cohort. In fact, it's not ture. Also, from original ABSOLUTE result, we can see nearly 30% of tumor have whole genome doubling. I am not sure if there are some problems when you adapted ABSOLUTE.
best regards,
Long PAN
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: