Cytosplore - Interactive Immune Cell Phenotyping for Large Singe-Cell Datasets
Implementing an interactive workflow to analyze mass cytometry data in an integrated system
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TU Wien, Campus Favoritenstraße
Seminarraum FAV 05 -
1040 Vienna, Favoritenstraße 9-11
Stiege 1, 5. Stock, Gelber Bereich, Raum HA0503
Abstract
To understand how the immune system works, one needs to have a clear picture of its cellular composition and the cells’ corresponding properties and functionality. Mass cytometry is a novel technique to determine the properties of single-cells with unprecedented detail. This amount of detail allows for much finer differentiation but also comes at the cost of more complex analysis. In this work, we present Cytosplore, implementing an interactive workflow to analyze mass cytometry data in an integrated system, providing multiple linked views, showing different levels of detail and enabling the rapid definition of known and unknown cell types. Cytosplore handles millions of cells, each represented as a high-dimensional data point, facilitates hypothesis generation and confirmation, and provides a significant speed up of the current workflow.
Biography
Thomas Höllt received the Diplom (MSc) from the University of Koblenz-Landau, Germany, in 2008, and the PhD in computer science from the King Abdullah University of Science and Technology, Saudi Arabia, in 2013. Currently, he is a Postdoctoral fellow at Delft University of Technology working on visualization of high dimensional data, with focus on Cytosplore, a framework for the visual analysis of high dimensional single cell data.
Note
This talk is organized in collaboration with the research center VRVis and the Austrian Computer Society OCG.
Speakers
- Dr. Thomas Höllt, Delft University of Technology
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