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Wallet, F.; Dussert, C.
Multifactorial comparative study of spatial point pattern analysis methods
1997  Journal of Theoretical Biology (187): 437-447

A way of studying cooperative behaviour of biological entities (proteins, cells, etc.) is by using topographical analysis: the quantification of the spatial patterns formed by the entities considered as points. Five methods of topographical analysis were compared in terms of discriminant power, stability of parameters, methodological bias and algorithms. We tested five methods (nearest neighbour distribution, radial distribution, Voronoi paving, quadrat count, minimal spanning tree graph) which generated nine parameters on four simulated models (random point process, hardcore model and two cluster models) and on experimental cellular models. The method which offers the best discrimination power and stability seems to be the minimal spanning tree graph edge length distribution.

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