Title
Use and abuse of correlation analyses in microbial ecology.
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
6-28-2019
Publication Title
ISME J
Abstract
Correlation analyses are often included in bioinformatic pipelines as methods for inferring taxon-taxon interactions. In this perspective, we highlight the pitfalls of inferring interactions from covariance and suggest methods, study design considerations, and additional data types for improving high-throughput interaction inferences. We conclude that correlation, even when augmented by other data types, almost never provides reliable information on direct biotic interactions in real-world ecosystems. These bioinformatically inferred associations are useful for reducing the number of potential hypotheses that we might test, but will never preclude the necessity for experimental validation.
Department
Institute for Systems Biology
Recommended Citation
Carr, Alex; Diener, Christian; Baliga, Nitin; and Gibbons, Sean M, "Use and abuse of correlation analyses in microbial ecology." (2019). Articles, Abstracts, and Reports. 1916.
https://digitalcommons.providence.org/publications/1916