The computational hardness of feature selection in strict-pure synthetic genetic datasets

Mohtasham, Majid Beheshti (2019) The computational hardness of feature selection in strict-pure synthetic genetic datasets. Doctoral (PhD) thesis, Memorial University of Newfoundland.

[img] [English] PDF - Accepted Version
Available under License - The author retains copyright ownership and moral rights in this thesis. Neither the thesis nor substantial extracts from it may be printed or otherwise reproduced without the author's permission.

Download (443kB)

Abstract

A common task in knowledge discovery is finding a few features correlated with an outcome in a sea of mostly irrelevant data. This task is particularly formidable in genetic datasets containing thousands to millions of Single Nucleotide Polymorphisms (SNPs) for each individual; the goal here is to find a small subset of SNPs correlated with whether an individual is sick or healthy(labeled data). Although determining a correlation between any given SNP (genotype) and a disease label (phenotype) is relatively straightforward, detecting subsets of SNPs such that the correlation is only apparent when the whole subset is considered seems to be much harder. In this thesis, we study the computational hardness of this problem, in particular for a widely used method of generating synthetic SNP datasets. More specifically, we consider the feature selection problem in datasets generated by ”pure and strict” models, such as ones produced by the popular GAMETES software. In these datasets, there is a high correlation between a predefined target set of features (SNPs) and a label; however, any subset of the target set appears uncorrelated with the outcome. Our main result is a (linear-time, parameter-preserving) reduction from the well-known Learning Parity with Noise (LPN) problem to feature selection in such pure and strict datasets. This gives us a host of consequences for the complexity of feature selection in this setting. First, not only it is NP-hard (to even approximate), it is computationally hard on average under a standard cryptographic assumption on hardness on learning parity with noise; moreover, in general it is as hard for the uniform distribution as for arbitrary distributions, and as hard for random noise as for adversarial noise. For the worst case complexity, we get a tighter parameterized lower bound: even in the non-noisy case, finding a parity of Hamming weight at most k is W[1]-hard when the number of samples is relatively small (logarithmic in the number of features). Finally, most relevant to the development of feature selection heuristics, by the unconditional hardness of LPN in Kearns’ statistical query model, no heuristic that only computes statistics about the samples rather than considering samples themselves, can successfully perform feature selection in such pure and strict datasets. This eliminates a large class of common approaches to feature selection.

Item Type: Thesis (Doctoral (PhD))
URI: http://research.library.mun.ca/id/eprint/14341
Item ID: 14341
Additional Information: Includes bibliographical references (pages 45-58).
Keywords: Computational Theory, Feature Selection, Genetic Datasets, Machine Learning, Single Nucleotide Polymorphism
Department(s): Science, Faculty of > Computer Science
Date: September 2019
Date Type: Submission
Digital Object Identifier (DOI): https://doi.org/10.48336/kebv-rx94
Library of Congress Subject Heading: Data mining--Mathematical models; Genetics--Data processing--Mathematical models; Computational complexity.

Actions (login required)

View Item View Item

Downloads

Downloads per month over the past year

View more statistics