Difference between revisions of "Framework for estimation of membrane thickness"
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>> ylabel('# Particles'); | >> ylabel('# Particles'); | ||
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− | + | [[File:MembraneDistanceHistogram.png|thumb|center|300px| Histogram of best responding membrane filters]] | |
− | [[File:MembraneDistanceHistogram.png|thumb| | ||
You'll need to convert each index to the actual number of pixels of the intermembrane space, and of course to physical units. | You'll need to convert each index to the actual number of pixels of the intermembrane space, and of course to physical units. |
Revision as of 11:41, 4 May 2017
This framework is more useful in plastic sections. The premise is that an alignment project has been created to fix the position an orientation of a set of points of interest inside a membrane. In a later stage, we want to get an estimation on the distance between the membrane layers on each particle. This task can be performed through a multireference analysis, but it can also be approached with an analysis a posteriori as sketeched here.
Contents
Reading the particles
The easiest way to bring particles aligned by a project is through the use of the dpkdata.Reader object. If you store the table and data folder of your project in myTable and myData
r = dpkdata.Reader(); r.setSource('table', myTable,'data',myData);
you can access the particles throught the getParticle method:
p = r.getParticle(12,'align',1);
gets the particle with tag 12 as a variable p in the workspace. You can also read all the particles as a matlab cell array through
pa = r.getParticle('*','align',1);
Note that pa may have empty spaces: only the positions with an actual particle tag in the data folder will be occupied. For instance, if you don't have a particle labelled wiht 4 in your data folder, you will see it as.
>> pa pa = 1×194 cell array Columns 1 through 5 [96×96×96 double] [96×96×96 double] [96×96×96 double] [] [96×96×96 double] Columns 6 through 9 [96×96×96 double] [96×96×96 double] [96×96×96 double] [96×96×96 double]
You can create a compact version of this cell array:
pac = mbg.cellCompact(pa);
>> pac us = 1×193 cell array Columns 1 through 4 [96×96×96 double] [96×96×96 double] [96×96×96 double] [96×96×96 double] Columns 5 through 8 [96×96×96 double] [96×96×96 double] [96×96×96 double] [96×96×96 double]
Creating a distance filter
We first create a set of filters that model the distance between the two layers of the membrane.
t = dpkfw.mdm.templateSeries('size',16,'thickness',1,'distance',[3:7]);
Here, t is a cell array, containing 5 volumes of 16x16x16 pixels each. Each volume contains a "model" of a membrane.
Applying the filters onto a particle
If you have your particle in the Matlab/Dynamo workspace with name p you can type.
o = dpkfw.mdm.bestFilteringDistance(p,'templates',t);
The output structure o contains several fields with different output aspects.
>> o o = output with properties: ok: 0 report: {} cc: {[1×1 struct] [1×1 struct] [1×1 struct] [1×1 struct] [1×1 struct]} ccmax: [0.3385 0.3321 0.7576 0.3305 0.3393]
In particular, ccmax is telling you the response of the particle to each filter. In this case, the largest response is to the third filter in t, corresponding to an space of 5 pixels.
Loop on particles and distance histogram
Now you can put all these elements together and compute the largest response for each particle.
for i=1:length(pac) o = dpkfw.mdm.bestFilteringDistance(pa{i},'templates',t); [maxcc,myIndex] = max(o.ccmax); indexList(i) = myIndex(1); % in case there are two maxima disp(i); end
Now, in the position i of numeric array indexList you have the index of the filter in t that responded best to the particle pa{i}. This can be depicted with the hist command in Matlab.
figure;hist(indexList,[1:5]); >> xlabel('Best filter'); >> ylabel('# Particles');
You'll need to convert each index to the actual number of pixels of the intermembrane space, and of course to physical units.