Skip navigation

Zastosuj identyfikator do podlinkowania lub zacytowania tej pozycji: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12128/22293
Tytuł: Novel visual analytics approach for chromosome territory analysis
Autor: Tkacz, Magdalena A.
Chromiński, Kornel
Idziak-Helmcke, Dominika
Robaszkiewicz, Ewa
Słowa kluczowe: Chromosme territory; Chromosome adjacency; Visualisation; 3D analysis; Computational science; Visual analytics; Nucleus; Nucleus structure; Rice
Data wydania: 2021
Źródło: "PeerJ", Vol. 9, 2021, art. no. e12661, s. 1-27
Abstrakt: This document presents a new and improved, more intuitive version of a novel method for visually representing the location of objects relative to each other in 3D. The motivation and inspiration for developing this new method came from the necessity for objective chromosome territory (CT) adjacency analysis. The earlier version, Distance Profile Chart (DPC), used octants for 3D orientation. This approach did not provide the best 3D space coverage since space was divided into just eight cones and was not intuitive with regard to orientation in 3D. However, the version presented in this article, called DPC12, allows users to achieve better space coverage during conification since space is now divided into twelve cones. DPC12 is faster than DPC and allows for a more precise determination of the location of objects in 3D. In this article a short introduction about the conification idea is presented. Then we explain how DPC12 is designed and created. After that, we show DPC12 on an instructional dataset to make it easier to understand and demonstrate how they appear and how to read them. Finally, using DPC12 we present an example of an adjacency analysis (AA) using the model of Chromosome Territories (CTs) distribution in the rice nucleus.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12128/22293
DOI: 10.7717/peerj.12661
ISSN: 2167-8359
Pojawia się w kolekcji:Artykuły (WNP)

Pliki tej pozycji:
Plik Opis RozmiarFormat 
Robaszkiewicz_et_al_Novel_visual_analytics.pdf14,06 MBAdobe PDFPrzejrzyj / Otwórz
Pokaż pełny rekord


Uznanie Autorstwa 3.0 Polska Creative Commons Creative Commons