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Electrocardiograms (ECG) record the heart activity and are the most common and reliable method to detect cardiac arrhythmias, such as atrial fibrillation (AFib). Lately, many commercially available devices such as smartwatches are offering ECG monitoring. Therefore, there is increasing demand for designing deep learning models with the perspective to be physically implemented on these small portable devices with limited energy supply. In this paper, a workflow for the design of small, energy-efficient recurrent convolutional neural network (RCNN) architecture for AFib detection is proposed. However, the approach can be well generalized to every type of long time series. In contrast to previous studies, that demand thousands of additional network neurons and millions of extra model parameters, the logical steps for the generation of a CNN with only 114 trainable parameters are described. The model consists of a small segmented CNN in combination with an optimal energy classifier. The architectural decisions are made by using the energy consumption as a metric in an equally important way as the accuracy. The optimisation steps are focused on the software which can be embedded afterwards on a physical chip. Finally, a comparison with some previous relevant studies suggests that the widely used huge CNNs for similar tasks are mostly redundant and unessentially computationally expensive.
Non-coding variations located within regulatory elements may alter gene expression by modifying Transcription Factor (TF) binding sites and thereby lead to functional consequences like various traits or diseases. To understand these molecular mechanisms, different TF models are being used to assess the effect of DNA sequence variations, such as Single Nucleotide Polymorphisms (SNPs). However, few statistical approaches exist to compute statistical significance of results but they often are slow for large sets of SNPs, such as data obtained from a genome-wide association study (GWAS) or allele-specific analysis of chromatin data.
Results We investigate the distribution of maximal differential TF binding scores for general computational models that assess TF binding. We find that a modified Laplace distribution can adequately approximate the empirical distributions. A benchmark on in vitro and in vivo data sets showed that our new approach improves on an existing method in terms of performance and speed. In applications on large sets of eQTL and GWAS SNPs we could illustrate the usefulness of the novel statistic to highlight cell type specific regulators and TF target genes.
Conclusions Our approach allows the evaluation of DNA changes that induce differential TF binding in a fast and accurate manner, permitting computations on large mutation data sets. An implementation of the novel approach is freely available at https://github.com/SchulzLab/SNEEP.