CCA: Quantifying Common and Distinct Information in Multi-Modal Single-Cell Data via Matrix Factorization

Seminar Details
Tuesday, January 31, 2023 - 4:00pm to 5:00pm

Speaker

Kevin Lin, Postdoctoral Research Fellow
Statistics and Data Science, Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania

Location

340 West Hall (1085 UNIVERSITY AVE)

Abstract: Recently, multi-modal single-cell data has been growing in popularity in many areas of biomedical research and provides new opportunities to learn how different modalities coordinate within each cell. Many existing dimension reduction methods for such data estimate a low-dimensional embedding that captures all the axes of variation from either modality. While these current methods are useful, we develop the Tilted-CCA in this talk to perform a fundamentally different task. This method is a novel matrix factorization that estimates low-dimensional embeddings separating the axes of variation shared between both modalities (i.e., "common geometry," capturing the coordination between both modalities) from axes of variation unique to a particular modality (i.e., "distinct geometry"). Methodologically, Tilted-CCA achieves this by combining ideas from Canonical Correlation Analysis (CCA) and density clustering. Our method first uses the nearest-neighbor graphs from each modality to infer the common geometry between both modalities and decomposes the canonical scores from CCA to approximate this geometry. Biologically, Tilted-CCA unveils the cellular dynamics in developmental systems based on the proportion of variation between the common and distinct embeddings. More broadly, Tilted-CCA invites new theoretical questions regarding dimension reduction and can be applied to any domain beyond single-cell genomics.

Short biography:
Kevin Lin is a current post-doctoral researcher at the University of Pennsylvania's Wharton Department of Statistics & Data Science with Dr. Nancy Zhang and completed his Ph.D. at Carnegie Mellon University's Department of Statistics & Data Science under Dr. Kathryn Roeder and Dr. Jing Lei. His research focuses on studying cellular mechanisms from single-cell data. He develops novel methods using ideas from matrix factorization, network modeling, and changepoint detection to derive new theoretical and biological insights, and he collaborates with both statisticians and biologists.