Skip to main content

Probabilistic Inference in Noisy Time-Series

Project description

Unit tests on multiple python versions Unit tests on multiple operating systems codecov Functional testing code Functional testing results binder readthedocs BCH compliance

What is Pints?

PINTS (Probabilistic Inference on Noisy Time-Series) is a framework for optimisation and Bayesian inference on ODE models of noisy time-series, such as arise in electrochemistry and cardiac electrophysiology.

PINTS is described in this publication in JORS, and can be cited using the information given in our CITATION file. More information about PINTS papers can be found in the papers directory.

Using PINTS

PINTS can work with any model that implements the pints.ForwardModel interface. This has just two methods:

n_parameters() --> Returns the dimension of the parameter space.

simulate(parameters, times) --> Returns a vector of model evaluations at
                                the given times, using the given parameters

Experimental data sets in PINTS are defined simply as lists (or arrays) of times and corresponding experimental values. If you have this kind of data, and if your model (or model wrapper) implements the two methods above, then you are ready to start using PINTS to infer parameter values using optimisation or sampling.

A brief example is shown below:
An example of using PINTS in an optimisation
(Left) A noisy experimental time series and a computational forward model. (Right) Example code for an optimisation problem. The full code can be viewed here but a friendlier, more elaborate, introduction can be found on the examples page.

A graphical overview of the methods included in PINTS can be viewed here.

Examples and documentation

PINTS comes with a number of detailed examples, hosted here on github. In addition, there is a full API documentation, hosted on readthedocs.io.

Installing PINTS

You'll need the following requirements:

  • Python 2.7 or Python 3.5+
  • Python libraries: cma matplotlib numpy scipy tabulate

These can easily be installed using pip. To do this, first make sure you have the latest version of pip installed:

$ pip install --upgrade pip

Then navigate to the path where you downloaded PINTS to, and install both PINTS and its dependencies by typing:

$ pip install pints

To install PINTS as a developer, use

$ git clone https://github.com/pints-team/pints.git
$ cd pints
$ pip install -e .[dev,docs]

To uninstall again, type

$ pip uninstall pints

Contributing to PINTS

If you'd like to help us develop PINTS by adding new methods, writing documentation, or fixing embarassing bugs, please have a look at these guidelines first.

License

PINTS is fully open source. For more information about its license, see LICENSE.

Get in touch

Questions, suggestions, or bug reports? Open an issue and let us know.

Alternatively, feel free to email us at pints at maillist.ox.ac.uk.

Project details


Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distribution

pints-0.3.0.tar.gz (163.9 kB view hashes)

Uploaded Source

Built Distribution

pints-0.3.0-py3-none-any.whl (231.0 kB view hashes)

Uploaded Python 3

Supported by

AWS AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Datadog Monitoring Fastly Fastly CDN Google Google Download Analytics Microsoft Microsoft PSF Sponsor Pingdom Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Sentry Error logging StatusPage StatusPage Status page