Visualisation

2001-10-30 Thread Lucy McWilliam
Do any of you trained compscis (or otherwise) know of good methods for visualising large matrices of data? Gene expression data - one value per gene per experiment - is usually represented as a line plot[0] (icky when many), or as a colour map[1]. L. "Goth/age/blonde* is a state of mind, not a

Re: Visualisation

2001-10-30 Thread Simon Wistow
On Tue, Oct 30, 2001 at 04:04:49PM +, Lucy McWilliam said: > Do any of you trained compscis (or otherwise) know of good methods > for visualising large matrices of data? Gene expression data - one > value per gene per experiment - is usually represented as a line plot[0] Hmm, I don't know i

Re: Visualisation

2001-10-30 Thread Ian Brayshaw
ing standard sesimic analysis, e.g. fourier transforms, convolutions, etc). Failing that, there are a number of free 3D visualisation packages supported by the seismic and meterological communities (not that the names of any leap to mind at the moment :) )

Re: Visualisation

2001-10-30 Thread Alex Gough
On Tue, 30 Oct 2001, Lucy McWilliam wrote: > > Do any of you trained compscis (or otherwise) know of good methods > for visualising large matrices of data? Gene expression data - one > value per gene per experiment - is usually represented as a line plot[0] > (icky when many), or as a colour map

Re: Visualisation

2001-10-30 Thread Redvers Davies
> Do any of you trained compscis (or otherwise) know of good methods > for visualising large matrices of data? Gene expression data - one www.opendx.org is the one :) I also have an eBook which would be of great use to you. You are more than welcome to have a look at it (I'll bring a laptop to