Scalability and Validation of Big Data Bioinformatics Software

Publication date: 2017Source: Computational and Structural Biotechnology Journal, Volume 15Author(s): Andrian Yang, Michael Troup, Joshua W.K. HoAbstractThis review examines two important aspects that are central to modern big data bioinformatics analysis – software scalability and validity. We argue that not only are the issues of scalability and validation common to all big data bioinformatics analyses, they can be tackled by conceptually related methodological approaches, namely divide-and-conquer (scalability) and multiple executions (validation). Scalability is defined as the ability for a program to scale based on workload. It has always been an important consideration when developing bioinformatics algorithms and programs. Nonetheless the surge of volume and variety of biological and biomedical data has posed new challenges. We discuss how modern cloud computing and big data programming frameworks such as MapReduce and Spark are being used to effectively implement divide-and-conquer in a distributed computing environment. Validation of software is another important issue in big data bioinformatics that is often ignored. Software validation is the process of determining whether the program under test fulfils the task for which it was designed. Determining the correctness of the computational output of big data bioinformatics software is especially difficult due to the large input space and complex algorithms involved. We discuss how state-of-the-art software testing t...
Source: Computational and Structural Biotechnology Journal - Category: Biotechnology Source Type: research