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Upcoming Why R Webinar – Why using R for analysis of the human microbiome is a good idea

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On Thursday, January 14th at 7 pm UTC, as part of the Why R? Webinar series, we have the honour to host Susan Holmes from Stanford University. She will talk about microbiomes and how to use R’s workflow to perform sophisticated downstream statistical analysis on those complex bacterial communities.

Join us!

Webinar

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Talk

Speaker

Why using R for analysis of the human microbiome is a good idea

High-throughput sequencing of PCR-amplified taxonomic markers (like the 16S rRNA gene) has enabled a new level of analysis of complex bacterial communities known as microbiomes. Many tools exist to quantify and compare abundance levels or composition of bacterial communities in different conditions. The sequencing reads have to be denoised and assigned to microbiomes the closest taxa from a reference database. By providing a complete workflow in R, we enable the user to do sophisticated downstream statistical analyses, whether parametric or nonparametric.

We provide examples of using the R packages dada2, phyloseq, DESeq2, ggplot2, structSSI and vegan to filter, visualize and test microbiome data. We also provide examples of supervised analyses using random forests and nonparametric testing using community networks and the ggnetwork and ggraph packages.

Sponsor

This event is part of a series sponsored by Jumping Rivers. For more information, check out the JR and WhyR partnership announcement.

Jumping Rivers is an advanced analytics company whose passion is data and machine learning. Our mission is to help clients move from data storage to intelligent data insights leveraging training and setup for data operations with world-leading experts in R and Python.

We offer courses in analytics, data visualisation and programming languages. From individuals to teams, we have what is needed to upscale your skills.

Our courses go from introduction to R and Python to advanced statistical models.

Check out the course’s calendar for 2021.

Questions? Contact us directly.

Contact

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