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An interactive signal selector for napari, based on matplotlib.

Project description

napari-signal-selector

License BSD-3 PyPI Python Version tests codecov napari hub DOI

An interactive signal selector and annotator for napari, based on matplotlib.

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Usage

This plugin opens an embedded plotter in napari capable of plotting and interacting (selecting/annotating) with individual object signals (typically temporal features).

plotting

Input Data

napari-signal-selector works with a Labels layer containing segmented objects and whose features attribute contains a table that follows the example structure shown below:

label frame feature ...
1 0 1.0 ...
2 0 1.0 ...
3 0 0.5 ...
4 0 0.5 ...
1 1 2.0 ...
2 1 1.0 ...
3 1 1.0 ...
4 1 1.0 ...
1 2 3.0 ...
2 2 1.0 ...
3 2 0.5 ...
4 2 1.5 ...

Basically, it needs an object identifier (in this case, the label column) that matches the labels in the Labels layer, and other columns containing x- and y-axis numbers to plot. Typically, x-axis is some temporal-related property.

Here is how one could add such a layer to a napari viewer via code (check this example notebook for more details):

viewer.add_labels(labels_image, features = table)

If a layer like this is selected, you can choose what to plot by means of dropdown fields in the bottom of the plotter.

Below is a basic example using the "Flashing Polygons" synthetic data:

intro

Tools

Selection Tool

The selection tool (arrowhead icon) is a toggle button which enables you to select individual signals. Once activated, the icon gets highlighted and you can click over individual signals to select them. Right-clicking unselects everything.

select

If the region you want to click is too crowded, consider zooming in first and then selecting.

zoom-select

And if you know which label you want to select, you can enable 'show selected' from the Labels layer options to solely display one label at a time. The Lables layer picker tool may help you get the right label.

show-selected

Annotation Tool

Once one or multiple signals are selected, you can annotate them with the annotation tool (brush with a 'plus' icon). You need to choose a signal class first. Remember to right-click to remove previous selections when annotating different signal classes!

annotation

Annotations are saved back in the table in a new column called 'Annotations'. Currently multiple annotations is not possible, i.e., more than one class assigned to the same part of the signal.

Span-Selection Tool

You can use the span-selection tool (bounded horizontal arrows icon) to sub-select one or multiple parts of signals. Right-click to unselect regions. Hold 'SHIFT' while dragging the mouse to select multiple sub-regions.

span-select

You can use this in conjunction with the annotation tool to have sub-regions from the same signal with different annotations.

Deletion Tool

If you made a mistake, you can remove previous annotations by selecting signal(s) and clicking on the trash icon at the right of the toolbar (or just annotate them with class 0).

delete

Also, with the selection tool enbaled, by holding 'SHIFT' and left-clicking, you can select all signals. This may be useful to delete all previous annotations.

select-delete-all

Exporting Annotations

The table with annotations can be displayed in napari using the 'Show table' widget from napari-skimage-regionprops plugin, which is available under Tools > Measurements > Show Table (nsr). This plugin may require a specific napari version, so check its documentation for more details.

By the way, with 'show selected' checked, you can click on a label row in the table and see the corresponding label in the image ...and in the plotter!

To export the table, click on 'Save as csv...'.

Another option is to run the following code in the napari console (replace 'Labels' with the name of your Labels layer and 'annotations.csv' with the desired file name or file path):

import pandas as pd
df = viewer.layers['Labels'].data.features
df.to_csv('annotations.csv')

Installation

You can install napari-signal-selector via pip. Follow these steps from a terminal.

We recommend using mamba-forge whenever possible. Click here to choose the right download option for your OS. If you do not use mamba-forge, replace the mamba term whenever you see it below with conda.

Create a conda environment :

mamba create -n napari-ss-env napari pyqt python=3.9

Activate the environment :

mamba activate napari-ss-env

Install napari-signal-selector via pip :

pip install napari-signal-selector

Alternatively, install latest development version with :

pip install git+https://github.com/zoccoler/napari-signal-selector.git

Contributing

Contributions are very welcome. Tests can be run with tox, please ensure the coverage at least stays the same before you submit a pull request.

License

Distributed under the terms of the BSD-3 license, "napari-signal-selector" is free and open source software

Issues

If you encounter any problems, please file an issue along with a detailed description.

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