Scan, extract, wrap, compute—a 3D method to analyse morphological shape differences
Author(s) -
Martin Horstmann,
Alexander T. Topham,
Petra Stamm,
Sebastian Kruppert,
John K. Colbourne,
Ralph Tollrian,
Linda C. Weiss
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
peerj
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.927
H-Index - 70
ISSN - 2167-8359
DOI - 10.7717/peerj.4861
Subject(s) - workflow , shape analysis (program analysis) , computer science , biology , rendering (computer graphics) , daphnia , computational biology , context (archaeology) , biological system , phenotype , artificial intelligence , pattern recognition (psychology) , evolutionary biology , ecology , gene , genetics , static analysis , paleontology , database , crustacean
Quantitative analysis of shape and form is critical in many biological disciplines, as context-dependent morphotypes reflect changes in gene expression and physiology, e.g., in comparisons of environment-dependent phenotypes, forward/reverse genetic assays or shape development during ontogenesis. 3D-shape rendering methods produce models with arbitrarily numbered, and therefore non-comparable, mesh points. However, this prevents direct comparisons. We introduce a workflow that allows the generation of comparable 3D models based on several specimens. Translocations between points of modelled morphotypes are plotted as heat maps and statistically tested. With this workflow, we are able to detect, model and investigate the significance of shape and form alterations in all spatial dimensions, demonstrated with different morphotypes of the pond-dwelling microcrustacean Daphnia . Furthermore, it allows the detection even of inconspicuous morphological features that can be exported to programs for subsequent analysis, e.g., streamline- or finite-element analysis.
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