Projects per year
Project Details
Description
PROJECT SUMMARY
The Statistical and Computational Analysis (SCA) Core will be a source of innovative data analytics and
high-quality data management for the new Prospective Genetic Risk Evaluation and Assessment (PROGRESS)
in Autism Center at Columbia University, focused on identifying and understanding genomic risk factors,
caregiver experiences and decision-making, and early-stage neurodevelopmental patterns in children at
identified genetic risk for autism. The SCA Core brings together experienced biostatisticians, computational
biologists, bioinformaticians, and genomics experts to deploy rigorous and reproducible data science methods
in pursuit of the PROGRESS Center’s aims. Members of the SCA Core have extensive expertise in leading and
executing analysis for complex research projects in autism and developmental psychopathology and have deep
collaborations with several co-investigators across the Center Projects. The SCA will pursue the following four
aims:
Aim 1: To perform computational analysis of genomic data to identify new risk genes and develop composite
genomic risk scores that predict autism risk based on genetic variants across the entire allele frequency spectrum
(Project 1 analyses).
Aim 2: To conduct statistical analysis of survey and behavioral outcomes in the PROGRESS cohort to model
parental outcomes and effects of genetic risk on children’s longitudinal neurobehavioral development (Project 2
and 3 analyses).
Aim 3: To integrate genetic, caregiver, and infant neurobehavioral development data across projects to obtain
a complete picture of children’s autism risk signatures (cross-Project analyses).
Aim 4: To maximize data quality and availability in all PROGRESS Center research, including through a central
data management platform that ensures rigor and reproducibility.
By integrating a robust data management and analytic pipeline with population-based, longitudinal data
collection, the SCA Core will allow the PROGRESS Center to reveal the implications of early life genetic
information, integrating genomic risk with neurodevelopmental trajectories and family impact.
Status | Finished |
---|---|
Effective start/end date | 9/1/23 → 8/31/24 |
ASJC Scopus Subject Areas
- Genetics
- Statistics and Probability
Fingerprint
Explore the research topics touched on by this project. These labels are generated based on the underlying awards/grants. Together they form a unique fingerprint.
Projects
- 1 Finished
-
Prospective Genetic Risk Evaluation and Assessment (PROGRESS) in Autism
Veenstra-vanderweele, J. J. (PI) & Chung, W. W. K. (CoPI)
9/6/22 → 8/31/23
Project: Research project