Real-life processes are characterized by dynamics involving time. Examples are walking, sleeping, disease progress in medical treatment, and events in a workflow. To understand complex behavior one... Show moreReal-life processes are characterized by dynamics involving time. Examples are walking, sleeping, disease progress in medical treatment, and events in a workflow. To understand complex behavior one needs expressive models, parsimonious enough to gain insight. Uncertainty is often fundamental for process characterization, e.g., because we sometimes can observe phenomena only partially. This makes probabilistic graphical models a suitable framework for process analysis. In this thesis, new probabilistic graphical models that offer the right balance between expressiveness and interpretability are proposed, inspired by the analysis of complex, real-world problems. We first investigate processes by introducing latent variables, which capture abstract notions from observable data (e.g., intelligence, health status). Such models often provide more accurate descriptions of processes. In medicine, such models can also reveal insight on patient treatment, such as predictive symptoms. The second viewpoint looks at processes by identifying time points in the data where the relationships between observable variables change. This provides an alternative characterization of process change. Finally, we try to better understand processes by identifying subgroups of data that deviate from the whole dataset, e.g., process workflows whose event dynamics differ from the general workflow. Show less
This dissertation mainly focuses on interdisciplinary approaches for biomedical knowledge discovery. This required special efforts in developing systematic strategies to integrate various data... Show moreThis dissertation mainly focuses on interdisciplinary approaches for biomedical knowledge discovery. This required special efforts in developing systematic strategies to integrate various data sources and techniques, leading to improved discovery of mechanistic insights on human diseases. Chapter one looks at the possibility in which combining various bioinformatics-based strategies can significantly improve the characterization of the OPMD mouse model. We discuss that this approach in knowledge discovery, on the basis of our extensive analysis, helped us to shed some light on how this model system relates to OPMD pathophysiology in human. In Chapter two, we expand on this combinatory approach by conducting a cross-species data analysis. In this study, we have looked for common patterns that emerge by assessing the transcriptome data from three OPMD model systems and patients. This strategy led to unravelling the most prominent molecular pathway involved in OPMD pathology. The third chapter achieves a similar goal to identify similar molecular and pathophysiological features between OPMD and the common process of skeletal muscle ageing. Engaging in a study in which the focus was made on the universality of biological processes, in the light of evolutionary mechanisms and common functional features, led to novel discoveries. This work helped us uncover remarkable insights on molecular mechanisms of ageing muscles and protein aggregation. Chapters four and five take a different route by tackling the field of computational biology. These chapters aim to extend network inference by providing novel strategies for the exploitation and integration of multiple data sources. We show that these developments allow us to infer more robust regulatory mechanisms to be identified while translations and predictions are made across very different datasets, platforms, and organisms. Finally, the dissertation is concluded by providing an outlook on ways the field of systems biology can evolve in order to offer enhanced, diversified and robust strategies for knowledge discovery. Show less