Skip to content

different flavors of PCA for single-cell analysis

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

hoangmgh/PCA_flavors

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

27 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

1. weighted PCA

1.1. Introduction In Cross-tissue, single-cell stromal atlas identifies shared pathological fibroblast phenotypes in four chronic inflammatory diseases, the authors use a technique called "weighted PCA", together with harmony, to remove batch effect across a wide variety of diseases. The most important observation they made is the stark difference between the number of cells between tissues. I rewrote a python implementation of an R version https://github.com/immunogenomics/singlecellmethods.

The original code lacks a bit of an explanation, however.

To dive into this, I would like to explain the concept of weighted PCA, first by formalizing the idea of weighted expectation, weighted variance, and eventually weighted covariance matrix. While there are various implementation of weighted PCA out there, this is perhaps the easiest implementation, most intuitive, and also well generalized from the original definition of PCA. First, we can define a weighted inner-product in the Euclidean space:

$$ \langle x,y \rangle_W = x^T W y $$

where the diagonal entries of $W$ stores the weights ($diag(W)=\vec{w}$) and their entries must sum to $1$. You can check that this is indeed an inner product by checking its properties. As a result, the weighted norm simply follows:

$$ |x| = \langle x,x \rangle = (x^T W x) \\ = \sqrt{\sum_{i=1}^n w_i x_i^2} $$

Then, we can define a weighted mean of a vector $\vec{x} \in \mathbb{R^n}$. You can think of a mean as a dot-product as well!

$$ \mu_x^W = \vec{x}^T \cdot \vec{w} = \vec{x}^T \cdot W \cdot \vec{1} = \langle x, \vec{1} \rangle_W $$

and $diag(W)=w$. You can always replace the weight vector with the diagonal matrix $W$ of the same size! In the unweighted case, we simply have all entries of $w$ to be $\frac{1}{n}$. Now, we can define weighted covariance of $x$ and $y$ as:

$$ Cov(x,y)_W = \langle x-\mu_x^W ,y-\mu_y^W \rangle_W = (x-\mu_x^W)^T W (y-\mu_y^W) $$

In short, most of our measures, i.e. correlation, covariance, mean, variance, are replaced with the weighted version. I think it makes sense that this has to be built from the ground up using a different version of the dot-product. The weights for each observation can also be interpreted as corresponding to the frequency of each observation. In an imbalance situation, it is favorable to incorporate this weight to reflect the frequency of different classes of observation.

Now, for a large matrix $A$ of form $\mathbb{R^{g \times c }}$, we can "bulk" compute the sample covariance matrix the following way. First, center each gene at the weighted mean and inversely scale them by the weighted standard deviation. From there, we can scale the matrix observation-wise (so that later on $AA^T$ actually sample correlation matrix):

The covariance matrix is, in fact, no longer $AA^T$ but $AWA^T$, due to our definition of the covariance above. The weighted PCA from here can be rewritten as diagonalizing (eigendecomposition):

$$AWA^T = AW^{1/2} W^{1/2}A^T = AW^{1/2} (AW^{1/2})^T$$

Here $W$ is diagonal so $W^{1/2}$ is the same as its transpose. Therefore, diagonalizing $AWA^T$ is equivalent to running SVD for $AW^{1/2}$. We can then write $AW^{1/2}$ as

$$AW^{1/2}=USV$$

and hence

$$A = USVW^{1/2}$$ Under the new orthogonal basis spanned by $U$, the coordinates are now given by $SVW^{1/2}$

2.Usage

An ideal weights array would sum up to 1, and a cell's weight must be inversely proportional to its population 'size.

For example, if a Batch of anndata is stored in .obs.Batch_key, we can get the frequency by:

freq= anndata.obs[Batch_key].value_counts()
w=1/freq
w=w[anndata.obs[Batch_key]]/length(unique(anndata.obs[Batch_key)))

This can make a nice helper function:

def generate_weights(anndata,Batch_key):
    assert Batch_key in anndata.obs.columns
    freq= anndata.obs[Batch_key].value_counts()
    w=1/freq
    w=w[anndata.obs[Batch_key]]/len(unique(anndata.obs[Batch_key]))
    return(np.array(w))

and so use can calculate a new w_PCA representation by running

w=generate_weights(anndata,batch)
anndata.obsm["X_wpca"]=weighted_pca(anndata,w,n_comp,corr=True)

Releases

No releases published

Packages

 
 
 

Languages