\name{normalizeCyclicLoess} \alias{normalizeCyclicLoess} \title{Normalize Columns of a Matrix by Cyclic Loess} \description{ Normalize the columns of a matrix, cyclicly applying loess normalization to normalize each pair of columns to each other. } \usage{ normalizeCyclicLoess(x, weights = NULL, span=0.4, iterations = 3) } \arguments{ \item{x}{numeric matrix, or object which can be coerced to a numeric matrix, containing log-expression values.} \item{weights}{numeric vector of probe weights. Must be non-negative.} \item{span}{span of loess smoothing window, between 0 and 1.} \item{iterations}{number of times to cycle through all pairs of columns.} } \details{ This function is intended to normalize single channel or A-value microarray intensities between arrays. Cyclic loess normalization is similar effect and intention to quantile normalization, but with some advantages, in particular the ability to incorporate probe weights. \link[affy]{normalize.loess} in the affy package also does cyclic loess normalization, using probe subsets instead of probe weights. } \value{ A matrix of the same dimensions as \code{x} containing the normalized values. } \references{ Bolstad, B. M., Irizarry R. A., Astrand, M., and Speed, T. P. (2003). A comparison of normalization methods for high density oligonucleotide array data based on bias and variance. \emph{Bioinformatics} \bold{19}, 185-193. } \author{Yunshun (Andy) Chen and Gordon Smyth} \seealso{ \code{\link{normalizeQuantiles}}. \link[affy]{normalize.loess} in the affy package. An overview of LIMMA functions for normalization is given in \link{05.Normalization}. } \keyword{models}