This is a difficult problem to solve. Maybe you can have a look a these three 
suites, I believe they may be the most complete ones you can find elsewhere.

- dChip, from Harvard (http://biosun1.harvard.edu/complab/dchip/)
- TM4 Suite from TIGR (http://www.tm4.org/)
- GEPAS (http://gepas.bioinfo.cipf.es/)

Obviously there is a trade-off between versatility and ease-of-use. With R (and 
Bioconductor), you will always be able to write your own procedures and perform 
your own analyses. Maybe it should be worth trying to teach R (and a bit of 
basic algorithmics theory) to your biologists. But that depends on how eager 
they are to learn.

Hope this helps a little.

Xavier Solé Acha
Unitat de Bioestadística i Bioinformàtica // Biostatistics and Bioinformatics 
Unit
Institut Català d'Oncologia // Catalan Institute of Oncology
Av. Gran Via s/n km 2,7
08907 L'Hospitalet de Llobregat, Barcelona, Spain.
Phone: +34 93 260 71 86 / +34 93 335 90 11 (ext. 3189)
Fax: +34 93 260 71 88
E-mail: [email protected]

 

-----Mensaje original-----
De: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] En 
nombre de Harry Mangalam
Enviado el: dilluns, 22 / desembre / 2008 19:40
Para: BBB
Asunto: [BiO BB] gene expression software for mere biologists?

Hi All,

This may be a difficult query for this group to answer as the readership is 
canted heavily in the geek direction, but what gene expression software are you 
and your users relying on for gene expression and pathway analysis?

I tilt heavily towards R/Bioconductor and other free software, so I'm aware of 
the advantages of it, but we have non-commandline tool researchers who are in 
need of tools they can use to examine the results of gene expression studies.

This is something of a no-win - those tools that are very easy to use tend to 
hide the very complexity that the user has to address, and so the 'ease of use' 
/ 'ease of thought' tends to weaken an already iffy analysis.

That said, are there tools (commercial or free) that provide fairly good 
tradeoffs between power and ease of use for a non-geek biologist user.  ie runs 
on Mac & Windows and is mostly GUI? (If you have experience in introducing such 
users to R, I'd also be interested in your experiences).

Due to some aggressive pushing from the local SAS consulting group, we are in 
the startup phase of a campus-wide, 1 year trial of JMP/Genomics.  JMP is a 
fairly cheap, nicely designed, multiplatform GUI stats package from SAS.  The 
Genomics part tho is an expensive add-on that runs only on Windows and depends 
on an optional, even more expensive Pathways package from InGenuity.  The local 
research community does not have a problem paying for such software if it truly 
does work easily and well.  If you have used it and have an opinion or 
evaluation, I'd love to hear from you via email or phone.

Harry

--
Harry Mangalam - Research Computing, NACS, E2148, Engineering Gateway, UC 
Irvine 92697  949 824-0084(o), 949 285-4487(c)
---
Good judgment comes from experience;
Experience comes from bad judgment. [F. Brooks.]

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