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arxiv: 1411.6144 · v2 · pith:GSJMVNQEnew · submitted 2014-11-22 · 📊 stat.ME · stat.AP· stat.CO

False discovery rate smoothing

classification 📊 stat.ME stat.APstat.CO
keywords smoothingratespatialdiscoveryfalsemethodmethodsregions
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We present false discovery rate smoothing, an empirical-Bayes method for exploiting spatial structure in large multiple-testing problems. FDR smoothing automatically finds spatially localized regions of significant test statistics. It then relaxes the threshold of statistical significance within these regions, and tightens it elsewhere, in a manner that controls the overall false-discovery rate at a given level. This results in increased power and cleaner spatial separation of signals from noise. The approach requires solving a non-standard high-dimensional optimization problem, for which an efficient augmented-Lagrangian algorithm is presented. In simulation studies, FDR smoothing exhibits state-of-the-art performance at modest computational cost. In particular, it is shown to be far more robust than existing methods for spatially dependent multiple testing. We also apply the method to a data set from an fMRI experiment on spatial working memory, where it detects patterns that are much more biologically plausible than those detected by standard FDR-controlling methods. All code for FDR smoothing is publicly available in Python and R.

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  1. Controlling False Discovery in Arbitrarily Structured Hypothesis Spaces via Reproducing Kernels

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    A kernel-based regularized learning framework for FDR control that unifies arbitrary structures and supplies provably valid decision rules with likelihood-based tuning.