Preprocess: Difference between revisions
imported>Jeremy |
imported>Scott |
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:datap = preprocess('apply',sp,data) %apply to new data | :datap = preprocess('apply',sp,data) %apply to new data | ||
:data = preprocess('undo',sp,datap) %undo preprocessing | :data = preprocess('undo',sp,datap) %undo preprocessing | ||
:preprocess('keywords') %Show valid method names. | |||
===Description=== | ===Description=== |
Revision as of 09:28, 21 April 2010
Purpose
Selection and application of standard preprocessing methods.
Synopsis
- s = preprocess(s) %GUI preprocessing selection
- s = preprocess('default','methodname') %Non-GUI selection
- [datap,sp] = preprocess('calibrate',s,data) %single block calibrate
- [datap,sp] = preprocess('calibrate',s,xblock,yblock) %multi-block
- datap = preprocess('apply',sp,data) %apply to new data
- data = preprocess('undo',sp,datap) %undo preprocessing
- preprocess('keywords') %Show valid method names.
Description
PREPROCESS is a general tool to choose preprocessing steps and to perform these steps on data. See preprouser for a description on how custom preprocessing can be added to the standard preprocessing options listed below. PREPROCESS can be used to perform 4 different tasks:
- 1) Specification of Preprocessing
- 2) Estimate preprocessing parameters (calibrate)
- 3) Apply preprocessing to new data (apply)
- 4) Remove the effect of previously-done preprocessing on data (undo)
Case 1) Specification of Preprocessing
The purpose of the following calls to PREPROCESS is to generate standard structure arrays that contain the desired preprocessing steps.
- s = preprocess;
generates a GUI and allows the user to select preprocessing steps interactively. The output s is a standard preprocessing structure.
- s = preprocess(s);
allows the user to interactively edit a previously-built preprocessing structure s. The output s is the edited preprocessing structure.
- s = preprocess('default','methodname');
returns the default structure for method methodname. A list of strings that can be used for methodname can be viewed using the command:
- preprocess('keywords')
Below is list of standard methods that can be used for 'methodname':
- 'abs': takes the absolute value of the data (see abs),
- 'autoscale': centers columns to zero mean and scales to unit variance (see auto),
- 'simple baseline': baseline (specified points, see baseline),
- 'baseline': baseline (weighted least squares, see wlsbaseline),
- 'derivative': derivative savgol,
- 'detrend': remove a linear trend (see baseline),
- 'gls weighting': generalized least squares weighting (see glsw),
- 'groupscale': group/block scaling (see gscale),
- 'logdecay': log decay scaling,
- 'log10': calculate base 10 logarithm of data,
- 'mean center': center columns to have zero mean (see mncn),
- 'msc (mean)': multiplicative scatter correction with offset, the mean is the reference spectrum (see mscorr),
- 'median center': center columns to have zero median (see medcn),
- 'centering': multiway center,
- 'scaling': multiway scale,
- 'normalize': normalization of the rows (see normaliz),
- 'osc': orthogonal signal correction (see osccalc and oscapp),
- 'smooth': Savitsky-Golay smoothing and deriviatives (see savgol), and
- 'snv': standard normal deviate (autoscale the rows, see snv),
- 'sqmnsc': sqrt mean scale, scale each variable by the square root of its mean.
The output is a standard preprocessing structure array s, where each preprocessing method to apply is contained in a separate record.
Case 2) Estimate preprocessing parameters (calibrate)
The objective of the following calls to PREPROCESS is to estimate preprocessing parameters, if any, from a calibration data set and perform preprocessing on the calibration data set. The I/O format is:
- [datap,sp] = preprocess('calibrate',s,data);
The inputs are s a standard preprocessing structure and data the calibration data. The preprocessed data is returned in datap, and preprocessing parameters are returned in a modified preprocessing structure sp. Note that sp is used as an input with the 'apply' and 'undo' commands described below.
Short-cuts for each method can also be used. Examples for 'mean center' and 'autoscale' are
- [datap,sp] = preprocess('calibrate','mean center',data);
- [datap,sp] = preprocess('calibrate','autoscale',data);
Preprocessing for some multi-block methods (specifically, 'osc' and 'gls weighting') require that the y-block be passed also. The I/O format in these cases is:
- [datap,sp] = preprocess('calibrate',s,xblock,yblock);
Case 3) Apply preprocessing to new data (apply)
The objective of the following call to PREPROCESS
- datap = preprocess('apply',sp,data)
is to apply the calibrated preprocessing in sp to new data. Inputs are sp, the modified preprocessing structure (See Case 2 above) and the data, data, to apply the preprocessing to. The output is preprocessed data datap that is class "dataset".
Case 4) Remove the effect of previously-done preprocessing on data (undo)
The inverse operation of applying preprocessing is performed in the following call to PREPROCESS
- data = preprocess('undo',sp,datap);
Inputs are sp, the modified preprocessing structure (See Case 2 above) and the data, datap, (class "double" or "dataset") from which the preprocessing is removed. Note that for some preprocessing methods (for example, 'osc' and 'sg') an inverse does not exist or has not been defined, and in such cases an 'undo' call will cause an error to occur. One reason for not defining an inverse, or undo, is because it would require a significant amount of memory storage when data sets get large.
See Also
crossval, pca, pcr, pls, preprouser, preprocatalog