CAGI Challenge Gauges Computational Predictions of Phenotype
By Bio-IT World Staff
September 20, 2011 | A host of deadlines are approaching for the CAGI challenges, starting September 30 and running through the end of the year.
The Critical Assessment of Genome Interpretation project is a community experiment to objectively assess computational methods for predicting the phenotypic impacts of genomic variation. The experiment is modeled on Critical Assessment of Structure Prediction (CASP); participants will be provided genetic variants and will make predictions of resulting molecular, cellular, or organismal phenotype. These predictions will be evaluated against experimental characterizations. Assessors include Rui Chen, Iddo Friedberg, Gad Getz, Sean Mooney, Pauline Ng, and Sean Tavtigian.
The goal CAGI is to identify bottlenecks in genome interpretation, inform critical areas of future research, and connect researchers from diverse disciplines whose expertise is essential to methods for genome interpretation.
The datasets used for the challenges include: Results will be announced at the CAGI 2011 Conference, December 9-10, 2011, held at the UCSF Mission Bay campus.