plotOptimResults: Plot the data and simulated values

Description Usage Arguments Details Value Author(s) References See Also Examples

Description

This function is the equivalent of CNOPlotFits, it plots the data and the simulated values, along with an image plot that tells which cues were present. The plots are coloured according to the fit between data and simulated data.

Usage

1
2
plotOptimResults(simResults, expResults, times, namesCues, namesSignals,
valueCues, formalism="new")

Arguments

simResults

a list with a field for each time point, each containing a matrix of dimensions (number of conditions) * (number of signals), with the first field being t0. Typically produced by simulating a model and then extracting the columns that correspond to signals

expResults

same as above, but contains the experimental results, ie this is CNOlist$valueSignals

times

a vector of times, its length should be the same as the number of fields in simResults and ExpResults

namesCues

a vector of names, typically CNOlist$namesCues

namesSignals

a vector of names, typically CNOlist$namesSignals

valueCues

a matrix of dimensions (number of conditions) * (number of cues), typically CNOlist$valueCues

formalism

New convention is to take the time=0 data set into account to compute the MSE. you can use the previous convetion by setting this argument to something different from the default value.

Details

The colouring of the background is done as follows: the mean absolute difference between observed and simulated values are computed, and colours are chosen based on this value: red (above 0.9), indianred1 (between O.8 and 0.9), lightpink2 (between 0.7 and 0.8), lightpink (between 0.6 and 0.7), mistyrose (between 0.5 and 0.6), palegoldenrod (between 0.4 and 0.5), palegreen (between 0.3 and 0.4), darkolivegreen3 (between 0.2 and 0.3), chartreuse3 (between 0.1 and 0.2), forestgreen (between 0 and 0.1). This function is used inside cutAndPlotResultsT1.

Value

This function doesn't return anything, it just produces a plot in your graphics window.

Author(s)

C. Terfve

References

J. Saez-Rodriguez, L. G. Alexopoulos, J. Epperlein, R. Samaga, D. A. Lauffenburger, S. Klamt and P. K. Sorger. Discrete logic modeling as a means to link protein signaling networks with functional analysis of mammalian signal transduction, Molecular Systems Biology, 5:331, 2009.

See Also

cutAndPlotResultsT1

Examples

 1
 2
 3
 4
 5
 6
 7
 8
 9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
tmpdir<-tempdir()
setwd(tmpdir)

#We will plot the fit of the full initial model compared to the data, without any optimisation
#This is normally not done on a stand alone basis, but if you have a model and would like to visualise its output compared to your data, then this is what you should do

#load and prepare data

data(CNOlistToy,package="CellNOptR")
data(ToyModel,package="CellNOptR")
indicesToy<-indexFinder(CNOlistToy,ToyModel,verbose=TRUE)
ToyFields4Sim<-prep4sim(ToyModel)

#simulate model

simRes<-simulatorT1(CNOlist=CNOlistToy,model=ToyModel, simList=ToyFields4Sim, indexList=indicesToy)

#format data and results

simResults<-list(t0=matrix(data=0,nrow=dim(simRes)[1],ncol=dim(simRes)[2]),t1=simRes)
expResults<-list(t0=CNOlistToy$valueSignals[[1]],t1=CNOlistToy$valueSignals[[2]])

#plot

plotOptimResults(
	simResults=simResults,
	expResults=expResults,
	times=CNOlistToy$timeSignals[1:2],
	namesCues=CNOlistToy$namesCues,
	namesSignals=CNOlistToy$namesSignals,
	valueCues=CNOlistToy$valueCues)

cokelaer/CellNOptR documentation built on May 27, 2019, 8:44 a.m.