XSCALE ISOCLUSTER
xscale_isocluster is a program that clusters datasets stored in a single unmerged reflection file as written by XSCALE.
The help output is
xscale_isocluster KD 2016-12-20. -h option shows options Academic use only; no redistribution. Expires 2017-12-31 usage: xscale_isocluster -dmin <lowres> -dmax <highres> -nbin <nbin> -mode <1 or 2> -dim <dim> -clu <#> -cen <#,#,#,...> -<aiw> XSCALE_FILE_NAME dmax, dmin (default from file) and nbin (default 10) have the usual meanings. mode can be 1 (equal volumes of resolution shells) or 2 (increasing volumes; default). dim is number of dimensions (default 3). clu (by default automatically) is number of clusters. cen (by default automatically) is a set of cluster centers (up to 9) specified by their ISET. cen must be specified after clu, and the number of values given must match clu. -a: base calculations on anomalous (instead of isomorphous) signal -i: write pseudo-PDB files to visualize clusters -w: no weighting of intensities with their sigmas
For dataset analysis, the program uses the method of Brehm and Diederichs (2014) Acta Cryst D70, 101-109 (PDF) whose theoretical background is in Diederichs (2017) Acta Cryst D73, 286-293 (open access). This results in an arrangement of N datasets represented by N vectors in a low-dimensional space. Typically, the dimension of that space may be chosen as n=2 to 4. n=1 would be suitable if the datasets only differ in their random error. One more dimension is required for each additional systematic property which may vary between the datasets, e.g. n=2 is suitable if they only differ in their indexing mode (which then only should have two alternatives!), or in some other systematic property, like the length of the a axis. Higher values of n (e.g. n=4) are appropriate if e.g. there are 4 indexing possibilities (which is the case in P3x), or more systematic ways in which the datasets may differ (like significant variations in a, b and c axes). In cases where datasets differ e.g. with respect to the composition or conformation of crystallized molecules, it is a priori unknown which value of n should be chosen, and several values need to be tried, and the results inspected.
For meaningful results, the number of known values (N*(N-1)/2 is the number of pairwise correlation coefficients) should be (preferrably much) higher than the number of unknowns (1+n*(N-1)).
The clustering of datasets in the low-dimensional space uses the method of Rodriguez and Laio (2014) Science 344, 1492-1496.