We are not very good at updating our website. We much prefer working on our projects and software!
That said, you can see what we've been working on lately on GitHub and Google Scholar.
Below you can find an incomplete list of our open-source source.
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radEmu
estimates changes in the abundance of microbial taxa using high-throughput sequencing data. radEmu
makes reasonable and empirically validated assumptions to estimate changes in the "absolute abundance" of taxa, where "absolute abundance" could be interpreted on the cell count, cell concentration or DNA concentration scale. Yes! From high-throughput sequencing data! It's true!
breakaway
is the premier package for statistical analysis of taxonomic richness. breakaway
implements a wide variety of estimates of taxonomic richness, as well as methods for modeling diversity is a function of covariates.
corncob
is an R
package for modeling relative abundance and testing hypotheses about the effect of covariates on relative abundance. The corncob
methodology was specifically developed for modelling microbial abundances based on high throughput sequencing data, such as 16S or whole-genome sequencing. Check out the paper for more details.
paramedic
is a R package for estimating microbial concentration. paramedic
uses information from 16S count data (compositional data on all taxa) and absolute data on a subset of taxa (e.g., qPCR or flow cytometry) to estimate the absolute abundance of all taxa. The method accounts for differing taxon detection efficiencies between the two methods, and produces prediction and confidence intervals as well as point estimates of the absolute abundance of all taxa. Check out the preprint for more details.
DivNet is an R
package for estimating alpha and beta diversity in ecological communities, including the Shannon, Simpson, Bray-Curtis, and Euclidean indices. Unlike other methods, DivNet utilizes covariate and replicate information ("metadata") and models taxa in the ecosystem interacting and co-occuring. Check out the paper for more details.
Department of Biostatistics
F-657, Box 357232
Health Sciences Building, 1959 NE Pacific St
University of Washington, Seattle, WA 98195