4.9.1. Diffusion map — MDAnalysis.analysis.diffusionmap
¶
Authors: | Eugen Hruska, John Detlefs |
---|---|
Year: | 2016 |
Copyright: | GNU Public License v2 |
This module contains the non-linear dimension reduction method diffusion map. The eigenvectors of a diffusion matrix represent the ‘collective coordinates’ of a molecule; the largest eigenvalues are the more dominant collective coordinates. Assigning phyiscal meaning to the ‘collective coordinates’ is a fundamentally difficult problem. The time complexity of the diffusion map is \(O(N^3)\), where N is the number of frames in the trajectory, and the in-memory storage complexity is \(O(N^2)\). Instead of a single trajectory a sample of protein structures can be used. The sample should be equiblibrated, at least locally. The order of the sampled structures in the trajectory is irrelevant.
The Diffusion Map tutorial shows how to use diffusion map for dimension reduction.
More details about diffusion maps are in [deLaPorte1], [Lafon1] , [Ferguson1], and [Clementi1].
4.9.1.1. Diffusion Map tutorial¶
The example uses files provided as part of the MDAnalysis test suite
(in the variables PSF
and
DCD
). This tutorial shows how to use the
Diffusion Map class.
First load all modules and test data
>>> import MDAnalysis as mda
>>> import MDAnalysis.analysis.diffusionmap as diffusionmap
>>> from MDAnalysis.tests.datafiles import PSF, DCD
Given a universe or atom group, we can create and eigenvalue decompose
the Diffusion Matrix from that trajectory using DiffusionMap
:: and get
the corresponding eigenvalues and eigenvectors.
>>> u = mda.Universe(PSF,DCD)
We leave determination of the appropriate scale parameter epsilon to the user, [Clementi1] uses a complex method involving the k-nearest-neighbors of a trajectory frame, whereas others simple use a trial-and-error approach with a constant epsilon. Currently, the constant epsilon method is implemented by MDAnalysis.
>>> dmap = diffusionmap.DiffusionMap(u, select='backbone', epsilon=2)
>>> dmap.run()
From here we can perform an embedding onto the k dominant eigenvectors. The non-linearity of the map means there is no explicit relationship between the lower dimensional space and our original trajectory. However, this is an isometry (distance preserving map), which means that points close in the lower dimensional space are close in the higher-dimensional space and vice versa. In order to embed into the most relevant low-dimensional space, there should exist some number of dominant eigenvectors, whose corresponding eigenvalues diminish at a constant rate until falling off, this is referred to as a spectral gap and should be somewhat apparent for a system at equilibrium with a high number of frames.
>>> # first cell of a jupyter notebook should contain: %matplotlib inline
>>> import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
>>> f, ax = plt.subplots()
>>> upper_limit = # some reasonably high number less than the n_eigenvectors
>>> ax.plot(dmap.eigenvalues[:upper_limit])
>>> ax.set(xlabel ='eigenvalue index', ylabel='eigenvalue')
>>> plt.tight_layout()
From here we can transform into the diffusion space
>>> num_eigenvectors = # some number less than the number of frames after
>>> # inspecting for the spectral gap
>>> fit = dmap.transform(num_eigenvectors, time=1)
It can be difficult to interpret the data, and is left as a task for the user. The diffusion distance between frames i and j is best approximated by the euclidean distance between rows i and j of self.diffusion_space.
4.9.1.2. Distance Matrix tutorial¶
Often a, a custom distance matrix could be useful for local
epsilon determination or other manipulations on the diffusion
map method. The DistanceMatrix
exists in
diffusionmap
and can be passed
as an initialization argument for DiffusionMap
.
>>> import MDAnalysis as mda
>>> import MDAnalysis.analysis.diffusionmap as diffusionmap
>>> from MDAnalysis.tests.datafiles import PSF, DCD
Now create the distance matrix and pass it as an argument to
DiffusionMap
.
>>> u = mda.Universe(PSF,DCD)
>>> dist_matrix = diffusionmap.DistanceMatrix(u, select='all')
>>> dist_matrix.run()
>>> dmap = diffusionmap.DiffusionMap(dist_matrix)
>>> dmap.run()
4.9.1.3. Classes¶
-
class
MDAnalysis.analysis.diffusionmap.
DiffusionMap
(u, epsilon=1, **kwargs)[source]¶ Non-linear dimension reduction method
Dimension reduction with diffusion mapping of selected structures in a trajectory.
-
eigenvalues
¶ Eigenvalues of the diffusion map
Type: array (n_frames,)
-
run
()[source]¶ Constructs an anisotropic diffusion kernel and performs eigenvalue decomposition on it.
-
transform
(n_eigenvectors, time)[source]¶ Perform an embedding of a frame into the eigenvectors representing the collective coordinates.
Parameters: - u (MDAnalysis Universe or DistanceMatrix object) – Can be a Universe, in which case one must supply kwargs for the initialization of a DistanceMatrix. Otherwise, this can be a DistanceMatrix already initialized. Either way, this will be made into a diffusion kernel.
- epsilon (Float) – Specifies the method used for the choice of scale parameter in the diffusion map. More information in [Lafon1], [Ferguson1] and [Clementi1], Default: 1.
- **kwargs – Parameters to be passed for the initialization of a
DistanceMatrix
.
-
-
class
MDAnalysis.analysis.diffusionmap.
DistanceMatrix
(u, select='all', metric=<function rmsd>, cutoff=-4.0, weights=None, **kwargs)[source]¶ Calculate the pairwise distance between each frame in a trajectory using a given metric
A distance matrix can be initialized on its own and used as an initialization argument in
DiffusionMap
. Refer to the Distance Matrix tutorial for a demonstration.-
dist_matrix
¶ Array of all possible ij metric distances between frames in trajectory. This matrix is symmetric with zeros on the diagonal.
Type: array, (n_frames, n_frames)
-
.. versionchanged:: 1.0.0
save()
method has been removed. You can usenp.save()
onDistanceMatrix.dist_matrix
instead.
Parameters: - u (universe ~MDAnalysis.core.universe.Universe) – The MD Trajectory for dimension reduction, remember that
computational cost of eigenvalue decomposition
scales at O(N^3) where N is the number of frames.
Cost can be reduced by increasing step interval or specifying a
start and stop value when calling
DistanceMatrix.run()
. - select (str, optional) – Any valid selection string for
select_atoms()
This selection of atoms is used to calculate the RMSD between different frames. Water should be excluded. - metric (function, optional) – Maps two numpy arrays to a float, is positive definite and symmetric. The API for a metric requires that the arrays must have equal length, and that the function should have weights as an optional argument. Weights give each index value its own weight for the metric calculation over the entire arrays. Default: metric is set to rms.rmsd().
- cutoff (float, optional) – Specify a given cutoff for metric values to be considered equal, Default: 1EO-5
- weights (array, optional) – Weights to be given to coordinates for metric calculation
- verbose (bool (optional)) – Show detailed progress of the calculation if set to
True
; the default isFalse
.
-
References
If you use this Dimension Reduction method in a publication, please cite [Lafon1].
If you choose the default metric, this module uses the fast QCP algorithm
[Theobald2005] to calculate the root mean square distance (RMSD) between two
coordinate sets (as implemented in
MDAnalysis.lib.qcprot.CalcRMSDRotationalMatrix()
). When using this
module in published work please cite [Theobald2005].
[Lafon1] | (1, 2, 3) Coifman, Ronald R., Lafon, Stephane. Diffusion maps. Appl. Comput. Harmon. Anal. 21, 5–30 (2006). |
[deLaPorte1] | J. de la Porte, B. M. Herbst, W. Hereman, S. J. van der Walt. An Introduction to Diffusion Maps. In: The 19th Symposium of the Pattern Recognition Association of South Africa (2008). |
[Clementi1] | (1, 2, 3) Rohrdanz, M. A, Zheng, W, Maggioni, M, & Clementi, C. Determination of reaction coordinates via locally scaled diffusion map. J. Chem. Phys. 134, 124116 (2011). |
[Ferguson1] | (1, 2) Ferguson, A. L.; Panagiotopoulos, A. Z.; Kevrekidis, I. G. Debenedetti, P. G. Nonlinear dimensionality reduction in molecular simulation: The diffusion map approach Chem. Phys. Lett. 509, 1−11 (2011) |