Entering edit mode
Nishant Gopalakrishnan
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340
@nishant-gopalakrishnan-3253
Last seen 10.2 years ago
Hi Pyne,
I have checked in a method inverseLogicleTransform which you can use
to get
back to the original untransformed data provided you pass in the same
parameters w,r,d which were used to transform the data initially.
This
should be available using biocLite("flowCore") tomorrow afternoon.
The default values for the parameters of the logicle transform were
obtained
from the paper by Parks et al. referenced in the man page for the
function.
For detailed information regarding the effect of the change in these
parameters on the logicle function and how to select optimal
parameters for
your data under consideration, please refer to the paper by Parks et
al.
which goes through the details of selection of the width parameter,
dynamic
range etc.
Nishant
-----Original Message-----
From: spyne@broadinstitute.org [mailto:spyne@broadinstitute.org]
Sent: Tuesday, October 06, 2009 1:15 PM
To: Nishant Gopalakrishnan
Subject: Re: [BioC] flowCore: inverse logicle transformation of flow
cytometry data
Hi Nishant,
Thanks a lot for your reply.
The inverse function will be quite helpful for me
and to many other users who may want to go back to
the scale they are used to once the analysis is over.
By the way, the logicle function has about 5 parameters,
I guess. However, I cannot tell this clearly from the
function description, between w, r, and d, exactly which
parameter determines the rate of spread of points away
from zero (origin)? And how was its default value set?
Best regards,
-Pyne
Quoting Nishant Gopalakrishnan <ngopalak at="" fhcrc.org="">:
> Hi Pyne,
>
> I am working on a function to calculate the inverse and will be
checking
> in some changes today.
> Thanks in advance for your patience.
>
> Nishant
>
> spyne at broadinstitute.org wrote:
>>
>> Hi,
>>
>> Wondering if the inverse function of logicle was implemented.
>>
>> Thanks,
>> -Pyne
>>
>>
>> Quoting Chao-Jen Wong <cwon2 at="" fhcrc.org="">:
>>
>>> Hi, Pyne,
>>>
>>> I agree with you that it is good to have an inverse function.
Thanks for
>>> your suggestion and tips. We will try to implement it next week.
>>>
>>> Thanks,
>>> Chao-Jen
>>>
>>> spyne at broadinstitute.org wrote:
>>>>
>>>> Hi,
>>>>
>>>> The reason I need the inverse function for logicle is because
>>>> after I have computationally identified the cluster of events in
>>>> logicle-transformed marker space, now I want to use the knowledge
>>>> of that range of events in the original, untransformed scale for
>>>> sorting out similar events in the subsequent experiments.
>>>>
>>>> My guess is that this may not be a very far-fetched scenario,
>>>> and since the transformation is deterministic and bijective
>>>> anyway, an inverse function would be good to have, at least for
>>>> the default argument settings. One option is of course a slow
>>>> numerical computation method.
>>>>
>>>> However, since the transformation is monotonic, for a fixed
setting
>>>> of arguments (e.g. the default setting), doing a simple binary
search
>>>> over a reasonable range is a cheap way to approximate the inverse
>>>> within a desirable accuracy.
>>>>
>>>> Thanks!
>>>> -Pyne
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> Quoting Chao-Jen Wong <cwon2 at="" fhcrc.org="">:
>>>>
>>>>> Hi, Pyne
>>>>>
>>>>> That is an interesting question. flowCore does not have an
inverse
>>>>> function for the logicle transformation. Since the logicle
>>>>> transformation is an one-to-one and onto function, it is
possible to
>>>>> implement an inverse function. It is, however, not
>>>>> straightforward. Do
>>>>> you really really need such a function?
>>>>>
>>>>> spyne at broadinstitute.org wrote:
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Hi,
>>>>>>
>>>>>> I applied logicle transformation (with default arguments)
>>>>>> to my data points, then detected the subpopulations of
>>>>>> interest in the transformed data, and now I want to
>>>>>> revert the subpopulations back to the original scale of
>>>>>> the untransformed state.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> In other words, if I want to apply the inverse of the logicle
>>>>>> transformtion (applied with default arguments, which I do not
>>>>>> know) to my data, is that possible?
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Thanks.
>>>>>> -Pyne
>>>>>>
>>>>>> _______________________________________________
>>>>>> Bioconductor mailing list
>>>>>> Bioconductor at stat.math.ethz.ch
>>>>>> https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/bioconductor
>>>>>> Search the archives:
>>>>>>
http://news.gmane.org/gmane.science.biology.informatics.conductor
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> --
>>>>> Chao-Jen Wong
>>>>> Program in Computational Biology
>>>>> Division of Public Health Sciences
>>>>> Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center
>>>>> 1100 Fairview Avenue N., M2-B876
>>>>> PO Box 19024
>>>>> Seattle, WA 98109
>>>>> 206.667.4485
>>>>> cwon2 at fhcrc.org
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> --
>>> Chao-Jen Wong
>>> Program in Computational Biology
>>> Division of Public Health Sciences
>>> Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center
>>> 1100 Fairview Avenue N., M2-B876
>>> PO Box 19024
>>> Seattle, WA 98109
>>> 206.667.4485
>>> cwon2 at fhcrc.org
>>>
>>>
>>
>> _______________________________________________
>> Bioconductor mailing list
>> Bioconductor at stat.math.ethz.ch
>> https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/bioconductor
>> Search the archives:
>> http://news.gmane.org/gmane.science.biology.informatics.conductor
>
>