Welcome!
Here you can explore the data related to our literature review: Methylation profile scores in early life: a systematic review and developmental risk atlas Pre-print.
On this page, you can search and filter the literature table.
publications
unique MPSs
unique Phenotypes
Last update:
Use the selection pane below to filter the data. Rows in the table are colored based on the Category assigned to the corresponding MPS. Navigate to the other tabs for interactive visualizations of these data.
In just a moment, you will see a couple of ways to visualize the distribution of phenotypes across the literature review.
In the multilevel pie chart below, you can see the number of MPSs per Category | Pehnotype. Hover over the slices to get more information. Click on one of the inner macro-categories to zoom into its phenotypes.
In the histogram below, you can see the number of MPSs calculated in each individual publication, colored by phenotype category. Hover over the bars to get more information (e.g publication title).
The stacked histogram below shows the interest in different phenotype categories over the years.
In just a moment, you will see some publication metadata. Explore the network of authors and publications.
The histogram below shows the number of publications per author, when more than 1 publication was included in the review. These are colored by phenotype category. Hover over the bars to get more info.
Use the zoom and pan tools on the top-right corner of the plot to explore the data.
The network graph below shows the connections between all authors and publications included in the review. Squares represent publications and they are colored by phenotype category. The light-blue dots represent individual authors. Hover over the nodes to get more info.
43% of publications in this review use existing resources to compute their MPSs.
13% use published EWAS summary statistics, and 30% use a Pre-established MPS. Here we explore these publications further.
The Sankey diagram below shows how well the sample(s) used to develop the MPS match the sample in which the MPS was applied.
Here you take a look at sample sizes over publication date.