NIH | National Cancer Institute | NCI Wiki  

WIKI MAINTENANCE NOTICE

Please be advised that NCI Wiki will be undergoing maintenance on Thursday, May 23rd between 1200 ET and 1300 ET.
Wiki will remain available, but users may experience screen refreshes or HTTP 502 errors during the maintenance period. If you encounter these errors, wait 1-2 minutes, then refresh your page.

If you have any questions or concerns, please contact the CBIIT Atlassian Management Team.

Versions Compared

Key

  • This line was added.
  • This line was removed.
  • Formatting was changed.
Panel
titleContents of this Guide
Table of Contents
minLevel2

Introduction to DataScope

DataScope allows you to browse and integrate multiple data types and visualize massive amounts of data. Using interactive, linked , filters and visualizations, you can narrow down the data you want to see and immediately see the results in bubble charts, data tables, image grids, and heatmaps.

DataScope includes many filters for adjusting your view of the data. The filters that appear are those that an administrator has customized for your use with DataScope and are not necessarily represented in the screenshots in this guide. The filters represented in this guide are part of the DataScope demo, which includes data from a co-clinical study. This data includes clinical, radiology, and pathology data, and pathology images from University of California, Davis and the The Cancer Genome Atlas Breast Cancer (TCGA BRCA) study.

Using the procedures explained in the DataScope Developer's Guide, you can customize your data, available filters, and charts. This guide explains the way to manipulate the bubble charts, data tables, and image grids you use to visualize your data. This documentation does not yet include information about the heatmap visualization type.

See DataScope in action in this DataScope video.

Accessing to DataScope

You must have a Google account to log in to DataScope.

To access DataScope

  1. In any browser, go to camicroscope.org/
    Multiexcerpt include
    MultiExcerptNameExitDisclaimer
    nopaneltrueMultiExcerptNameExitDisclaimer
    PageWithExcerptwikicontent:Exit Disclaimer to Include
    .
    The caMicroscope Login page appears.
    caMicroscope Login PageImage Modified
  2. Click Google Plus Sign In.
    The If you have not yet logged into Google, you are prompted the log in. Once you are logged in, the Google Offline Access page appears.
    Google Offline Access Request page caMicroscope would like to have offline access. Deny or Allow.Image Modified
  3. Click Allow.
    The caMicroscope page of product options appears.
    caMicroscope software optionsImage Modified
  4. Scroll down to the DataScope - beta release section and click DataScope button.
    A demo of DataScope appears, which includes data from a co-clinical study. This data includes clinical, radiology, and pathology data, and pathology images from University of California, Davis and the The Cancer Genome Atlas Breast Cancer (TCGA BRCA) study.

    Integrative Data Query window highlighting the arrow next to the Filtering Attributes and the three visualization tabs

Filtering the Data

DataScope includes many filters for adjusting your view of the data. The filters that appear are those that an administrator has customized for your use with DataScope and are not necessarily represented in the screenshots in this guide. The filters represented in this guide are part of the DataScope demo. Filters are cumulative, which means that you can apply multiple filters to help narrow down your results. The filters are also interactive, meaning that when you set one filter, you impact the rest. For example, selecting one age cohort may mean that data is not available for a certain ethnicity.

For a more convenient view of the filtering options, click the arrow at the top of the Filtering Attributes panel. This expands the view of the filtering attributes so that they fill the screen.

Arrow in the Filtering Attributes panelImage Modified

All of the filtering attributes appear, as well as a Download link, for downloading a spreadsheet of the data after you have (or have not) filtered it.

...

In the following example, the Group and Disease-Free Months panels are open.

Filtering Attributes panels in the open positionImage Modified

In the following example, all of the filtering attribute panels are hidden.

Filtering Attributes, plus sign for filteringImage Modified

Clearing Filters

You must clear each filter individually by clicking Clear Filter buttonImage Modified in each panel. As you clear a filter, the number of records that meet your filtering criteria will likely increase. You may want to note a control value, such as the number of records in the group, to illustrate the change in selected records as you apply filters.

Bar Graphs

You apply filtering attributes differently depending on their graph type.

...

In the following graph, Stage IIA has been selected, making the other bars unavailable for selection.

Neoplasm Disease Stage graph, Stage IIA selectedImage Modified

Pie Charts

To filter using a pie chart, click one or more pieces of the pie.

In the following chart, none of the categories have been selected.

Disease-Free Status Pie ChartImage Modified

In the following chart, the DiseaseFree category has been selected and the other categories are not available.

Disease-Free Status, DiseaseFree selectedImage Modified

Histograms

To filter attributes using a histogram, you have two options that accomplish the same thing:

...

In the following histogram, no values have been selected yet.

Disease-Free MonthsImage Modified

In the following histogram, a range has been selected, which exists between the brackets and appears in the range boxes below the chart. The values are entered automatically as you move the brackets.

Disease-Free Months histogram, with the range of 21.7777 to 68.4444 selectedImage Modified

Understanding the Visualization Types

DataScope is interactive and provides multiple options for visualizing a large database. These options include selecting filtering attributes and viewing the data in a table, bubble chart (also called scatterplot or SPLOM), image grid, or heatmap.

In the case of bubble charts, you can use these options in combination. For example, if you have already applied a filtering attribute to show only one age group, you can further narrow down your selection by selecting a different category in the bubble chart.

In the following example, a user has selected the filtering category of Asian and then further filtered the results to show those Asians between the ages of 30 and 40. Blue data points are selected, while grey are unavailable for selection.

DataScope showing the selected Race-Category of Asian and the age range of 30-40Image Modified

Using a Data Table

A data table provides a tabular representation of the data. Data tables show 100 records at a time and you can page through them. The following is an example of a data table.

Data Table with 100 entriesImage Modified

To select data in a data table, first click the DataTable tab, then click a row, which represents an image seriesa patient. The patient is linked so that radiology data from The Cancer Image Archive (TCIA) can be retrieved in subsequent screens.

A new browser window appears, showing patient information about all of the images in that seriesrelevant to the radiology data.

Row of data from the TCGA-BRCA collectionImage Modified

Using the SPLOM Tab

DataScope displays both various types of charts, including bubble charts and histograms, on the SPLOM (ScatterPLot Of Matrices) tab. Bubble charts are a type of scatterplot in which the data points are replaced with bubbles. An additional dimension of the data is represented in the size of the bubbles.

SPLOM tab showing a set of bubble charts and bar graphsImage Modified

You can filter data on the SPLOM tab by adjusting the brackets in a histogram, as explained above, or by defining a selection area in a bubble chart. Only blue bars or dots within the selection area are available for selection. The background of the area you have selected is shaded blue.

Selections in a histogram and a bubble chart on the SPLOM tabImage Modified

Using an Image Grid

An Image Grid is a two-column list of images. When more screen real estate becomes available, the list of images expands to add more columns.

Radiologic images on the ImageGrid tabImage Modified

 

To select an image grid, click the ImageGrid tab. All of the images matching the filters you selected appear. Click an image to open it in caMicroscope. Each time you click the image, it zooms in further. Learn more about using caMicroscope in the caMicroscope User's Guide

Multiexcerpt include
MultiExcerptNameExitDisclaimer
nopaneltrueMultiExcerptNameExitDisclaimer
PageWithExcerptwikicontent:Exit Disclaimer to Include
.

Heatmap

A heatmap is a graphical representation of data in which the individual values contained in a matrix are represented by colors. The demo was not configured for this type of visualization, so this tab does not appear in the demo.

...