langevitour

langevitour is an HTML widget that randomly tours projections of a high-dimensional dataset with an animated scatter-plot. The user can manipulate the plot to use specified axes, or turn on Guided Tour mode to perform projection pursuit, finding an informative projection of the data. Groups within the data can be hidden or shown, as can particular axes. Known projections of interest can be added as “extra axes” and also manipulated. The widget can be used from within R or Python, or included in a self-contained Rmarkdown document, or a Shiny app, or used directly from Javascript.

langevitour is a twist on the “tour” concept from software such as XGobi, GGobi, tourr, ferrn, liminal, detourr, spinifex, and loon.tour. The new element in langevitour is the use of Langevin Dynamics to generate the sequence of projections.

langevitour is described in:

Harrison, Paul. 2023. “langevitour: Smooth Interactive Touring of High Dimensions, Demonstrated with scRNA-Seq Data.” The R Journal 15 (2): 206–219. https://doi.org/10.32614/RJ-2023-046.

Further material:


R installation

# Released version
install.packages("langevitour")
# Development version
remotes::install_github("pfh/langevitour")

R usage

Example:

library(langevitour)

data(zeiselPC)
langevitour(zeiselPC[,-1], zeiselPC$type)


JavaScript usage

The minified and bundled version can be found in inst/htmlwidgets/lib/langevitour-pack.js.

ESM module and npm

If using node and npm for development, langevitour can be added with:

npm install pfh/langevitour

This provides the widget as a modern ESM module. In your HTML page you can import it with:

<script type="module">

import { Langevitour } from "langevitour";

// ...
</script>

You’ll need to use a packager such as parcel or webpack to use this. Please tell me if you run into any problems, I am fairly new to Javascript development.

JavaScript development

langevitour is written in TypeScript, which is compiled to JavaScipt, and then Webpack is used to produce a minified and bundled version. To make changes to the JavaScript side of langevitour, you will need to install node, which includes the npm package manager. npm can then install the necessary build tools and dependencies. Build scripts are defined in package.json and used as below.

git clone https://github.com/pfh/langevitour.git
cd langevitour

# Install required packages
npm install

# ... edit source in src/ directory ...

# Compile TypeScript modules in src/ to JavaScript modules in lib/.
# Produce minified bundle inst/htmlwidgets/lib/langevitour.js
npm run js-build

# Complete Javascript+R build and documentation process.
npm run build

For example, to define a new guide you would:


Python installation

pip install langevitour

Python usage

import numpy as np

from langevitour import Langevitour

# Generate a sample dataset
X = []
group = []
n = 20000

def r():
    return np.random.normal(0, 0.02)

for i in range(n):
    a = i/n * np.pi * 2
    X.append([
        10 + np.sin(a)/3 + r(),
        20 + np.sin(a*2)/3 + r(),
        30 + np.sin(a*3)/3,
        40 + np.sin(a*4)/3,
        50 + np.sin(a*5)/3
    ])
    group.append(int(i*4/n))

# Extra axes (specified as columns of a matrix)
extra_axes = [[1], [2], [0], [0], [0]]
extra_axes_names = ["V1+2*V2"]

tour = Langevitour(
    X,
    group=group,
    extra_axes=extra_axes,
    extra_axes_names=extra_axes_names,
    point_size=1,
)
tour.write_html("langevitour_plot.html")

langevitour also works in jupyter notebooks.

Authors

The Javascript and R package are written by Paul Harrison. The Python package was kindly contributed by Wytamma Wirth.

Langevitour is free software made available under the MIT license. Included libraries jStat and SVD-JS are also provided under the MIT license. Included library D3 is provided under the ISC license.

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